The real story of youth in the nineties is this : chemicals, clubs, bars, pubs, pushing the vinyl, blagging the guest list, mobile phones, trainers, combats, care-less, monged, mashed, sorted, safe. And here it is in all its pupil-dilated, teeth grinding, club-hopping glory. The weekend has well and truly landed... Read more
| Starring | John Simm, Lorraine Pilkington, Shaun Parkes, Danny Dyer |
|---|---|
| Director | Justin Kerrigan |
| Genres | Drama |
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The real story of youth in the nineties is this : chemicals, clubs, bars, pubs, pushing the vinyl, blagging the guest list, mobile phones, trainers, combats, care-less, monged, mashed, sorted, safe. And here it is in all its pupil-dilated, teeth grinding, club-hopping glory. The weekend has well and truly landed...
| Starring | John Simm, Lorraine Pilkington, Shaun Parkes, Danny Dyer, Nicola Reynolds, Dean Davies, Justin Kerrigan, Jan Anderson, Carol Harrison, Andrew Lincoln |
|---|---|
| Director | Justin Kerrigan |
| Studio | PRISM LEISURE |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 35 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Subtitles | DVD: None |
| Released | DVD: 14 Apr 2003 Production year: 1999 |
| Format | DVD |
Director Justin Kerrigan's debut movie is a valiant attempt to put across the atmosphere of Britain's club scene. It follows the fortunes of five friends who go out on a lost, drug-and-drink-fuelled weekend in the dance halls of Cardiff. Jip (John Simm) can't get it together with girls and confides in friend Lulu (Lorraine Pilkington) as their night out turns into two days of frenzied rave-up. Trainspotting it isn't, but the spirited acting from the talented youngsters and the inspired visuals, which come out of the screen like a chemical rush, combine to make it a fascinating social commentary.
Energetic youth movie, using lurid fantasy sequences and stylistic excesses of one sort and another to duplicate the druggy experiences of its characters.
Probably the worst British films ever. When this came out everyone was going on about this bloody film.
They cant even hold a decent telephone conversation!!! 'Geezer?'.
'Geezer, geezer?'... and on and on...
Supremely irritating!!!
a bit boring not my cup of tea, very slow
Every generation deserves its own too-cool-for-school teen movie. For some of us it was Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. Others had Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Heathers, or Dazed and Confused, or Human Traffic… They may not seem cool to older folk, but what do the young care about that? Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist sets out to be such a film. It relates a night in the life of two teen misfits. Nick (a typically decent and befuddled Michael Cera) might be cool - he’s... Read more