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Directed by Lisa Cholodenko, this Oscar-nominated film shifted the context to a modern, domestic setting. Starring Annette Bening and Julianne Moore as a lesbian couple whose teenage children seek out their sperm donor, the title here served a different purpose. It suggested that despite the "non-traditional" family structure or the messy infidelities of the adults, the children were the most stable, well-adjusted people in the room. The Cultural Subtitle
Taking its name from the song, this rockumentary chronicled the chaotic, brilliant history of The Who. By this point, the phrase had taken on a layer of irony. It showcased the band’s self-destruction and brilliance, suggesting that "all right" might mean surviving by the skin of your teeth. The Film (2010) subtitle The Kids Are All Right
It remains the ultimate backhanded compliment from the old to the young: a sigh of relief that the future might be in okay hands after all. The Cultural Subtitle Taking its name from the
Long before it was a subtitle or a movie, it was a power-pop anthem by The Who. Pete Townshend wrote it as a nod to the "Mod" subculture in London. While the lyrics deal with a specific romantic anxiety, the title became a defiant manifesto. It was a message to a nervous older generation: Stop worrying; we know what we’re doing. The Documentary (1979) The Film (2010) It remains the ultimate backhanded
The phrase is a cultural boomerang. It’s been a rock anthem, a film title, and a recurring headline for decades, usually surfacing whenever one generation stops to scrutinize the next. The Origin: The Who (1966)