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Movies / On DVD / Bright Young Things
Bright Young Things

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Bright Young Things (2004)

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Reviews Counted:105

Fresh:69

Rotten:36

Average Rating:6.3/10

Runtime: 1 hr 45 mins

Genre: Comedies

Synopsis: "Some time in the past when things were much as they are now, only more so..." A satirical comedy as well as a love story, Bright Young Things, marks the directorial debut of actor and writer... "Some time in the past when things were much as they are now, only more so..." A satirical comedy as well as a love story, Bright Young Things, marks the directorial debut of actor and writer Stephen Fry. "Bright Young Things," says Fry, "is a period film shot with modern pace and cinematography. It deals with fame, sexual scandal, greed, night-clubbing and the frantic glamour of youth." While the central plot of Bright Young Things is a romance, it is also a highly topical social comedy that shows a conservative older generation failing to understand the club-culture, music, dance, and frenetic pace of its children. Modern society at its most decadent and colourful is fully on display as is the popular media fuelled by gossip columnists and paparazzi who dominate a tabloid press propelled by rumour and scandal. With a screenplay adapted by Stephen Fry from the classic novel Vile Bodies by Evelyn Waugh, the film boasts an outstanding cast including Stephen Cambell Moore, Emily Mortimer, Fenella Woolgar, James McAvoy, Michael Sheen and Guy Henry as the 'Bright Young Things', alongside a distinguished ensemble line-up that includes Dan Aykroyd, Jim Broadbent, Simon Callow, Stockard Channing, Richard E. Grant, Julia McKenzie, Sir John Mills, Peter O'Toole, Bill Paterson, Imelda Staunton and Harriet Walter. Set in the 1930's, the film concerns a social set known to the press -- who follow their every move -- as the 'Bright Young Things', Adam (Stephen Campbell Moore) and his friends are eccentric, wild, and entirely shocking to the older generation. They are young, party-going creatures who embrace every innovation, from the gramophone to the telephone -- in a self-consciously up-to-the-minute way. Amidst the madness, Adam, who is well connected but totally broke, is desperately trying to get enough money to marry the beautiful Nina (Emily Mortimer). While his attempts to raise cash are constantly thwarted, their friends seem to self-destruct, one-by-one in an endless search for newer and faster sensations. Finally, when events out of their control come crashing into the world, they are forced to reassess their lives and what they value the most. Bright Young Things, a THINKFilm release, is a Revolution Films and Doubting Hall Ltd production in association with the Film Consortium, Vision View and Icon Film Distribution, produced by Gina Carter and Miranda Davis, executive produced by Andrew Eaton and Michael Winterbottom. Behind the cameras, the distinguished production team is headed by director of photography Henry Braham, production designer Michael Howells, costume designer Nic Ede and editor Alex Mackie, with hair and make up by Peter King. -- © ThinkFilm [More]

Starring: Emily Mortimer, Stephen Campbell Moore, Dan Aykroyd, Jim Broadbent

Starring: Emily Mortimer, Stephen Campbell Moore, Dan Aykroyd, Jim Broadbent, Simon Callow, Jim Carter, Stockard Channing, Richard E. Grant, Guy Henry, James McAvoy, Julia McKenzie, John Mills, Bill Paterson, Michael Sheen, Imelda Staunton, David Tennant, Harriet Walter, Peter O'Toole

Director: Stephen Fry

Director: Stephen Fry
Screenwriter: Stephen Fry
Studio: ThinkFilm

[See More Credits]

Reviews for Bright Young Things

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61 - 80 (sorted by date; UK critics are listed first)
Text View | |< << 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> >|
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Seeing Bright Young Things is like going to a party that you greatly enjoy even while realizing that you may not remember it.

Full Review Source: Dallas Morning News | comment Comment
09/16/04
Philip Wuntch
Philip Wuntch
Dallas Morning News

Lovers of Waugh should be generally satisfied by the clever wordplay, inventive madcap situations, and, most of all, by the profoundly conservative message that the frivolous society elites sober up only when confronted with a disaster.

Full Review Source: South Florida Sun-Sentinel | comment Comment
09/16/04
Chauncey Mabe
Chauncey Mabe
South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Reduces what's bracingly biting on the page to something that's pretty but rather toothless on the screen.

Full Review Source: One Guy's Opinion | comment Comment
09/15/04
Frank Swietek
Frank Swietek
One Guy's Opinion

Fry...makes his debut here...but 'Bright Young Things' has the complexity, along with the verve and polish and style expected of a seasoned filmmaker.

Full Review Source: culturevulture.net | comment Comment
09/11/04
Arthur Lazere
Arthur Lazere
culturevulture.net

Fry, in his directing debut, shows an eye for style, a fine literary intelligence and an unmistakable heart.

Full Review Source: Seattle Times | comment Comment
09/10/04
Moira MacDonald
Moira MacDonald
Seattle Times

Witty, energetic adaptation.

Full Review Source: San Francisco Chronicle | comment Comment
09/10/04
Carla Meyer
Carla Meyer
San Francisco Chronicle

The Bright Young Things profess to be bored, but in Fry's hands, they are never boring.

Full Review Source: Philadelphia Inquirer | comment Comment
09/10/04
Carrie Rickey
Carrie Rickey
Philadelphia Inquirer

Exults in its own giddy absurdity.

Full Review Source: Washington Post | comment Comment
09/10/04
Desson Thomson
Desson Thomson
Washington Post

Waugh's novel and Fry's movie wisely see that their characters live by spending their comic capital and ending up emotionally overdrawn.

Full Review Source: Chicago Sun-Times | comment Comment
09/10/04
Roger Ebert
Roger Ebert
Chicago Sun-Times
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

It's a fits-and-starts kind of thing, advancing three steps to the side for every step forward, possibly more enchanted with the vagaries of its own characters than we in the audience might be.

Full Review Source: Washington Post | comment Comment
09/10/04
Stephen Hunter
Stephen Hunter
Washington Post

When the decade winds down, though, Bright Young Things loses its luminence.

Full Review Source: Northwest Herald (Crystal Lake, IL) | comment Comment
09/10/04
Jeffrey Westhoff
Jeffrey Westhoff
Northwest Herald (Crystal Lake, IL)

As faithful to the spirit of the novel, and the era that inspired it, as a movie could be yet still feel as fresh as Paris Hilton dish on Page Six.

Full Review Source: Los Angeles Times | comment Comment
09/09/04
Carina Chocano
Carina Chocano
Los Angeles Times
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Stubbornly fails to be the kind of sparkling ensemble piece one would expect from its credits -- and the fault seems to lie squarely with Fry's unfocused script, lackadaisical direction and conceptual sleight of hand.

Full Review Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer | comment Comment
09/09/04
William Arnold
William Arnold
Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Its brightest stars, and those who get the best lines, are its campy, sexually ambiguous newcomers -- a very funny Michael Sheen as the queeny doper Miles Malpractice, and a wonderfully daffy Fenella Woolgar as Agatha Runcible.

Full Review Source: L.A. Weekly | comment Comment
09/09/04
Ella Taylor
Ella Taylor
L.A. Weekly

A brilliant, giddy satiric romp with a discreetly moralistic viewpoint beneath its high-style wit.

Full Review Source: Chicago Tribune | comment Comment
09/09/04
Michael Wilmington
Michael Wilmington
Chicago Tribune

A terribly witty romp...but director Fry furtively hints at shades of compunction and misfortune...taking the film to unexpected level of empathy, nuance and humanity.

Full Review Source: SPLICEDWire | comment Comment
09/09/04
Rob Blackwelder
Rob Blackwelder
SPLICEDWire

Fry's too smart to oversell contemporary parallels, and also too generous not to find something endearing about all these doomed, stubbornly frivolous folks.

Full Review Source: Philadelphia Weekly | comment Comment
09/08/04
Sean Burns
Sean Burns
Philadelphia Weekly

Sinister undertones of drugs, homosexuality, and tattered reputations lend a thorny cynicism that keeps the drawing-room clichés from reeling out of control.

Full Review Source: Palo Alto Weekly | comment Comment
09/07/04
Jeanne Aufmuth
Jeanne Aufmuth
Palo Alto Weekly

A would-be comedy of manners that has few, if any, genuine, sincere or funny moments.

Full Review Source: Internet Reviews | comment Comment
09/05/04
Steve Rhodes
Steve Rhodes
Internet Reviews

Easy come, easy go...has the right satirical snap, energetic pace, and likeable performances to stay consistently amusing.

Full Review Source: Groucho Reviews | comment Comment
09/05/04
Peter Canavese
Peter Canavese
Groucho Reviews
 
 
61 - 80 (sorted by date; UK critics are listed first)
Text View | |< << 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> >|
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