A response to the Crystals's "He's a Rebel", an ode to the charms of a rebellious man (spy the cover for a guy on a motorbike looking positively defiant), in which the subject's nature ("he'll never, ever be any good") doesn't stop her loving him. The French Resistance version is in the form of a bit of an argument between Dyan and Eddie, who knows that all that "rebel" stuff is just BS.
In Eddie's words:
The Crystals sang a love song to "dangerous" men. Everybody Was In The French Resistance ... Now! opened up the conversation to other men, who see through the "rebel" schtick and argue that it's all just an act.
A response to the Crystals's "He's a Rebel", an ode to the charms of a rebellious man (spy the cover for a guy on a motorbike looking positively defiant), in which the subject's nature ("he'll never, ever be any good") doesn't stop her loving him. The French Resistance version is in the form of a bit of an argument between Dyan and Eddie, who knows that all that "rebel" stuff is just BS.
In Eddie's words: The Crystals sang a love song to "dangerous" men. Everybody Was In The French Resistance ... Now! opened up the conversation to other men, who see through the "rebel" schtick and argue that it's all just an act.