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"Straight to Hell" is a song by The Clash, from their 1982 album Combat Rock.
Straight to Hell is a film by Alex Cox, featuring Sy Richardson, Courtney Love, Dennis Hopper, Grace Jones, Joe Strummer, Elvis Costello, and members of The Pogues. Its tagline is: "A story of blood, money, guns, coffee, and sexual tension."
Often viewed as a parody of Spaghetti Westerns, it is really more of an homage. While the film is almost devoid of positive reviews by critics, it has (like several other of Cox's films), achieved something of a cult status, largely due to its cast of musicians, many of whom have cult followings of their own.
The film was not originally intended to be made at all, and the reason for a preponderance of musicians in the cast was the result of a concert tour of Nicaragua that was planned in the first place. Political problems arose concerning the support of the left-wing government of Nicaragua, and the tour was cancelled. In its place Cox decided to have the bands, and a slew of actors he could assemble, make a movie in Almeria, Spain. Cox and co-star Dick Rude wrote a script in a hurry, and the entire film was shot in just four weeks.
The plot of Straight to Hell (if there can be said to be one) concerns three inept hitmen (played by Richardson, Rude, and Strummer) who, after blowing a job, rob a bank and flee to Mexico to escape the wrath of their boss (played by Jim Jarmusch). They come to a ghost town run by a gang of coffee-addicted killers, eventually leading to the inevitable bloodbath at the end. The movie has been accused of being one giant "in-joke", that few get, but those who do get it appreciate the movie for its subtle wit and absurdity.
The end of the film announces an imminent sequel: Back to Hell. It is highly unlikely that Cox ever seriously contemplated such a film, for a such movie made as a lark he certainly never could have expected it to be a substantial commercial success. Likewise almost every main character is killed at the end of the film. (It is perhaps noteworthy that the only survivors are women and minorities, with the exception of Dennis Hopper's character of I.G. Farben, who instigates the final battle and reaps the spoils.) Nevertheless, for the film's DVD release Cox reassembled much of the cast and crew for a short documentary called Back to Hell, in which they reminisce about the making of the film.
Alex Cox turned down the chance to direct Three Amigos in order to film Straight to Hell.