Film News
BEYOND THE STREETS Presents Latest Documentary ‘DEAD CITY PUNX’
BEYOND THE STREETS is proud to present its latest documentary, ‘DEAD CITY PUNX,’ premiering April 16th in Los Angeles at The Regent Theater.
BEYOND THE STREETS is proud to present its latest documentary, DEAD CITY PUNX. The movie follows a band – Dead City Punx – whose massive illegal outdoor shows are full of fireworks, fistfights, bonfires, and graffiti pit them against the LAPD, LAFD, and the mayor, ultimately resuscitating LA’s music scene while forcing the viewer to question what DIY and punk really mean when sh*t gets real.
The documentary premieres on Thursday, April 16th, in Los Angeles, CA, at The Regent Theater – tickets here. There will be two screenings: 6:30 pm (featuring a special DJ set by Keith Morris of the Circle Jerks) and 9:30 pm (featuring a surprise guest) – tickets here. The next day, Friday, April 17th, there is a gallery opening at BEYOND THE STREETS. DEAD CITY PUNX is executive produced by Roger Gastman, Joseph Pattisall, and Zack de la Rocha.
Born from stolen equipment and street life connections, the band Dead City Punx – Meka, Grumpy, Mike, and Adrian – built stages for their shows from shoplifted wood, used social media as their “bat signal” and turned every performance into a crime scene complete with graffiti backdrops, bonfires, and police helicopters.
Through fan-filmed concert footage and exclusive interviews, DEAD CITY PUNX captures how four outcasts from society’s margins ignited a pandemic-era music movement that challenged definitions of public space, rebellion, and the right to assemble. BEYOND THE STREETS presents the story of Dead City Punks – raw, unfiltered, and as real as their shows.
Each character reveals their humble beginnings on the margins of society between wild Dead City performances, demonstrating how they became a band that “makes shows a crime scene.”
This is what can happen when people reclaim their right to assemble. And while the demonized players never transform into angels, we witness creativity born from the ashes of recovery, as well as testimony declaring playing music with friends to be a “more powerful addiction than drugs.”
This documentary pushes the viewer to question the very definitions of DIY ethos, activism, public space, excessive force, and rebellion in today’s modern world. The band Dead City Punx is anti-establishment, anti-authoritarian, and fiercely individualistic. It reflects a cultural moment where punk is not nostalgia — it remains a shout of defiance.
Founding members Grumpy and Meka first met at a trap house in a gang-controlled neighbourhood in Central Los Angeles. High on meth, they played anything they could get their hands on, ultimately, with instruments stolen from a church. They put a band together with a few other friends, including longtime friend, criminal, and graffiti writer Mike, on vocals, and Adrian on bass. Dead City Punx was born.
The band played their first shows in the fall of 2019 until COVID lockdowns shuttered venues and forbade gatherings around the world by early 2020. Boredom drove them to put on their own illegal outdoor shows, using the same methods they used for doing graffiti: scope out spots, paint using stolen materials, evade gangs and law enforcement. They played anywhere – from deserts outside of LA to their first chaotic show at the Echo Park Recreation Center. They built their own stages with stolen wood and bags of cement, plugging into generators ready to blast their songs into crowds pumped with pent-up aggression from the lockdowns.

‘DEAD CITY PUNX’ by BEYOND THE STREETS
Infamous shows in Lafayette Park, Frogtown (which shut down the Interstate 5 Freeway), Oakland, and beneath the 6th Street Bridge followed. Thousands upon thousands of fans descended, and even as the LAPD fired rubber bullets and police helicopters surrounded them, Dead City Punx played on.
The shows were promoted over social media, with the band dropping hints an hour or so before announcing the location. Fans were ready with fireworks, nitrous tanks, and spray cans. All the action caused every show to go viral, all well-documented by professional and amateur photographers and videographers. During dark times in an upside-down world, going to a Dead City Punx show became a badge of honour.
Without record label support or professionally recorded songs, this underground band of musicians seized hearts and headlines along the way as their actions, plus online gossip, turned them into folkloric archenemies of everyone from the mayor of LA to certain peers within the punk community. Dead City ignored all haters and proved itself unstoppable.
Fan footage and news coverage documented the entire pandemic phenomenon, elevating the band into shooting stars supported by media-savvy and socially starved youth.
Each member of Dead City Punx is a survivor. Vandals, yes, but also witnesses to a city that nearly swallowed them whole through addiction, incarceration, and homelessness. Music became their lifeline. Raised on hip hop and rock, they funnelled trauma and rage into a collective expression that replaced self-destruction with something louder, messier, and more meaningful. The band became their chosen family, and the fans their fuel.
Los Angeles-based Dead City Punx channels chaos, survival, and DIY rebellion into a raw, unfiltered redefinition of punk through contemporary art, fashion, music, mayhem, fireworks, fistfights, bonfires, and graffiti into their massive self-produced illegal shows.
-
Folk/Singer-Songwriter3 days agoGitika Partington Talks 130 Songs, 13 Albums, and the Creative Journey Behind Her Ambitious Project
-
Music3 days agoSkye Newman Brings ‘The Woman I Am’ Headline Tour to Liverpool Mountford Hall [Photos]
-
Music3 days agoJames Deliver Unforgettable Career Spanning Set at Leeds First Direct Bank Arena [Photos]
-
Alternative/Rock21 hours agoTakedown Festival 2026 Delivers Another Standout Year in Portsmouth [Photos]
-
Album News2 days agoBring Me The Horizon Performing ‘Count Your Blessings’ at Special Outbreak Manchester Show
-
heartdea13r3 days agoDaniel Mastropietro & Josh Misko on Seatfun, Startups, Funding & the Future of Ticketing // #068
-
heartdea13r5 days agoDonivan Blair on Toadies, Martial Arts, Mindset, Healing & Working with Steve Albini // #067
-
MAKE // BREAK18 hours agoSamantha Willman: Truth, Poetry, and the Love It Demands


