Beautiful Thing
Chris Seager: Cinematographer
Don Fairservice: Editor
Bill Shapter: Producer
Tony Garnett: Producer
Jonathan Harvey: Writer
Sony Pictures
| List Price: |
$24.96 |
| Amazon Price: |
$19.99 |
| Lowest New Price: |
$18.92 |
| Lowest Used Price: |
$15.99 |
| Total New: |
40 |
| Total Used: |
9 |
DVD Details:
- Starring: Glen Berry, Linda Henry, Meera Syal, Martin Walsh, Steven M. Martin
- Director: Hettie Macdonald
- Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
- Rated: R (Restricted)
- Studio: Sony Pictures
- Theatrical Release Date: Oct 09, 1996
- DVD Release Date: May 20, 2003
- Run Time: 90 minutes
- ASIN: B00008UALE
- UPC: 043396009684
- Sales Rank: 5162
Amazon Customer Reviews:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
    What a lovely movie!, 2008-12-18
This is a very sweet, very deeply satisfying fairy tale of a movie about young men falling in love in a London housing project in the 1990s. It's essentially the Cinderella story, with a cruel father and older brother, the Fairy Godmother and her son Prince Charming living next door, and assorted colorful neighbors. The ball comes at the end of the movie instead of the middle, but that's fine.
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br /Life, of course, is nothing like this, but it's very nice to watch anyway. Especially the truly beautiful ending that fills me with joy every time, no matter how often I've seen it. Plus the fact that the boys look and act like real people and not fashion models. It's refreshing to see a gay movie with not a single gym body in it.
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br /But why on earth did Sandra dump Tony? The Fairy Godmother had her own Prince Charming and threw him away. That made no sense at all. Maybe they just felt like the ending couldn't be perfect for everybody, but it's a fairy tale, so why not?
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br /I love it anyway. The best 90 minutes I've spent in a long, long time.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
    Charming Coming of Age Story, 2008-10-12
This 1996 entry from the ever-inventive Channel Four Films, puts most (if not all) gay coming-of-age movies to shame. This charmer is the story of Jamie (Glenn Berry) and Steve (Scott Neal), two teens who are not exactly friends; not exactly enemies. Their bond is more their proximity than anything else. That and the fact that they both are beginning to feel that there has to be more to life than the projects of South London. Jamie is the more studious, the more in touch with his emerging sexuality, the one tormented with taunts of "poof" and "queer". Steve, trapped in his flat with his physically abusive father and brother, is the more "straight" and dreams of sports infamy. The boys find themselves drawn together, dealing with the problems of their lives, and ultimately falling in love, falling in fear of love, and finally falling into a measure of comfortability with one another.
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br /The eclectic cast of characters includes Jamie's barmaid mother Sandra (the brilliant Linda Henry), Sandra's oh-so-understanding boyfriend Tony, and teen neighbor Lia (Tameka Empson - a bravura performance in the "hag" role) who wants nothing more than to be Mama Cass. The result is a story not so much about two boys coming out, but about a whole community daring to come out of their respective closets and daring to dream. The film utilizes the music of Mama Cass and The Mamas and the Papas almost exclusively, resulting in a soundtrack that -- for a change -- actually serves the needs of the film. Though not the best made film from a technical standpoint, the characters are rich and believable, and if the last scene alone doesn't give you a lump in your throat, well...then you are jaded, aren't you.
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br /Originally reviewed for Uniquely Pleasurable.
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