The half-hearted release mirrors the efforts put in by nearly everyone involved.
Blow Dry (2001)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:63
Fresh:12
Rotten:51
Average Rating:4/10
Consensus: Heartwarming, but over-the-top and too formulaic.
Runtime: 1 hr 31 mins
Genre: Comedies
Synopsis: The British Hairdressing Championship is coming to the small Yorkshire town of Keighley. The Mayor (Warren Clarke) is ecstatic--but initially the townspeople are underwhelmed. The exotic models and... The British Hairdressing Championship is coming to the small Yorkshire town of Keighley. The Mayor (Warren Clarke) is ecstatic--but initially the townspeople are underwhelmed. The exotic models and their even more exotic hairdressers arrive--among them reigning champion, Ray Robertson (Bill Nighy). The Mayor is disappointed when there is no local entry, especially since Keighley is the hometown of ex-champion, Phil Allen (Alan Rickman). But, Phil stopped competing when his model, Sandra (Rachel Griffiths), ran off with his wife, Shelley (Natasha Richardson). Shelley has cancer, and discovering it is terminal, she tries to reunite her family--Phil, their son Brian (Josh Hartnett), and Sandra--by entering the competition. Phil refuses. However, needled by the confident Ray, Brian enters on behalf of the family. Soon, they are cutting hair together again. Director Paddy Breathnach maintains the delicate balance between the pathos of Shelley's illness and the breathtaking flamboyance of the hairdressing competition, as it goes from outrageous camp to gorgeous fulfillment. Alan Rickman is splendid--especially when the phlegmatic Phil returns to competition with flashing scissors and tattooed feet. Natasha Richardson is touching as she fights to regain her family. And Rachel Griffiths gives a powerful performance, apparently in support, until she becomes the family's fabulous golden angel. [More]
Starring: Alan Rickman, Natasha Richardson, Josh Hartnett, Rachael Leigh Cook
Starring: Alan Rickman, Natasha Richardson, Josh Hartnett, Rachael Leigh Cook, Rachel Griffiths, Hugh Bonneville, Bill Nighy, Heidi Klum
Director: Paddy Breathnach
Director: Paddy Breathnach
Screenwriter: Simon Beaufoy
Producer: Sydney Pollack, William Horberg, Ruth Jackson
Studio: Miramax Films
Reviews for Blow Dry
The script by Simon Beaufoy of The Full Monty fame is far more soapy than bubbly as it concentrates on extended family entanglements and allows its comic potential to be bleached out by a ponderous mawkish streak.
Marred by mixing a supposedly touching and tragic family story with a half-blown, numbly campy send-up of the world of hair, Blow Dry just doesn't jibe.
Blow Dry is enjoyable in a low-key way, but it's far from an unqualified hit, and lacks the infectious energy of Beaufoy's earlier effort.
Blow Dry has some wonderful moments, but the laughs are thin and the serious bits skid into melodrama.
By the end of this dispirited piece of regurgitated Full Monty NutraSweet, you'll wish someone were pointing a nail gun at your head instead.
For all of its attempts at fluffing up this could-be-cute tale, Blow Dry lays flat -- padded down by subplots about broken marriages, struggles with cancer and an unnecessary Romeo-and-Juliet story.
This comedy is like the worst kind of hair: limp, unattractive, dull, full of split ends and needlessly dirty.
What Blow Dry needs, though, is less connect-the-dots and a little more of the waywardness that Warren Clarke's mayor-turned-emcee manages to wring from his limited assignment.
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