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IMDbPro

Summer Musical

Originaltitel: Hunky Dory
  • 2011
  • 6
  • 1 Std. 50 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,2/10
1377
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Minnie Driver in Summer Musical (2011)
In the heat of the summer of 1976, keen drama teacher Vivienne fights sweltering heat and general teenage apathy to put on an end of year music version of Shakespeare's The Tempest.
trailer wiedergeben1:56
2 Videos
25 Fotos
DramaKomödieMusik

Im Sommer des Jahres 1976 kämpft die Theaterpädagogin Vivienne gegen die brütende Hitze und die allgemeine Apathie von Teenagern, um zum Schuljahresende eine Inszenierung von Shakespeares "D... Alles lesenIm Sommer des Jahres 1976 kämpft die Theaterpädagogin Vivienne gegen die brütende Hitze und die allgemeine Apathie von Teenagern, um zum Schuljahresende eine Inszenierung von Shakespeares "Der Sturm" auf die Beine zu stellen.Im Sommer des Jahres 1976 kämpft die Theaterpädagogin Vivienne gegen die brütende Hitze und die allgemeine Apathie von Teenagern, um zum Schuljahresende eine Inszenierung von Shakespeares "Der Sturm" auf die Beine zu stellen.

  • Regie
    • Marc Evans
  • Drehbuch
    • Laurence Coriat
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Minnie Driver
    • Kristian Gwilliam
    • Adam Byard
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,2/10
    1377
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Marc Evans
    • Drehbuch
      • Laurence Coriat
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Minnie Driver
      • Kristian Gwilliam
      • Adam Byard
    • 19Benutzerrezensionen
    • 44Kritische Rezensionen
    • 46Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos2

    Theatrical Version
    Trailer 1:56
    Theatrical Version
    Hunky Dory
    Trailer 2:00
    Hunky Dory
    Hunky Dory
    Trailer 2:00
    Hunky Dory

    Fotos25

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
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    + 19
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung99+

    Ändern
    Minnie Driver
    Minnie Driver
    • Vivienne Mae
    Kristian Gwilliam
    • Hoople
    Adam Byard
    Adam Byard
    • Lewis
    Aled Pugh
    Aled Pugh
    • Tim
    Aneurin Barnard
    Aneurin Barnard
    • Davey
    Tom Rhys Harries
    Tom Rhys Harries
    • Evan
    • (as Tom Harries)
    Danielle Branch
    Danielle Branch
    • Stella
    Kimberley Nixon
    Kimberley Nixon
    • Vicki
    Kayleigh Bennett
    Kayleigh Bennett
    • Dena
    Darren Evans
    Darren Evans
    • Kenny
    Dafydd Llyr-Thomas
    • Syd…
    Robert Pugh
    Robert Pugh
    • Headmaster
    • (as Bob Pugh)
    Jodie Davis
    • Mandy
    Ryan Hacker
    • Daz
    Lewis Coster
    • Davy's Friend
    Sam Shervill
    • Davy's Friend
    Kyle Lewis
    • Skin
    James Morgan
    • Skin
    • Regie
      • Marc Evans
    • Drehbuch
      • Laurence Coriat
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen19

    6,21.3K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10elizabethaloe

    This movie is excellent!

    Let me start by saying I'm NOT a fan of musicals or Glee. As a matter of fact, I can't stand them unless its a musical with good music like Rock of Ages or Mamma Mia. Anyhow, this movie blew me away. I haven't been this captivated by music in a movie and the characters in so long. I loved Minnie Driver's performance and her voice is amazing. She sings a rendition of Going Back by Carol King that is just beautiful. The kids are so talented, too. I see big things for Aneurin Barnard. I really recommend this film if you like those British indies like The Full Monty, Billy Elliot, and Brassed Off, I also recommend it if you are a fan of David Bowie, ELO, The Beach Boys, the Byrds and Nick Drake. The soundtrack is excellent and I listen to it a lot. I don't review movies all that often, but this one was so worth it to me. I'm surprised at some the meh reviews because its way better than that.
    7Greigx3

    don't let the critics put you off

    People have complained that this film is too formulaic, it's too glossy and sugar-coated and that it's so steeped in saccharine sentimentality that it will make the overpriced, syrupy Coke that you bought from the multiplex foyer seem sour and flat.

    While there is definitely truth in the above statement, I think enjoyment of this (and any) film depends on your attitude. If you go into this film expecting to see some gritty socio-political drama focussing on the oppression of Welsh mining classes, you will be sorely disappointed. You will come out complaining about how populist it is, how it's so conventionally structured and emotionally sensationalist etc, etc.

    The poster is a lovely snapshot of a group of idyllic young friends having fun in the blistering summer of 1976. It's all orange and glowing. The trailer gives a taste of how packed the film is with poppy love songs of the era, how predictable the premise makes the plot, how familiar the angsty teenage characters are, how petty the conflicts seem in this hazy summer utopia of a bygone Britain and how indulgently reminiscent it is.

    It's called Hunky Dory.

    The signs are there - everything about the design screams out feel-good mainstream movie. It is unashamedly populist, unashamedly sensational and is obviously going to be as conventional as any piece of popular cinema. There's nothing subtle about the way the film advertises this sense of style.

    To know all this, watch the film then criticize it for the glaringly obvious is lazy criticism, at best. Don't go and see the film if you know you're going to suffer an adverse reaction to the sheer amount of light-heartedness going on. That's like going into a screening of Shrek with your arms folded for the entire movie then coming out in a huff saying to your bemused/horrified children "the guy's an ogre but not once did I see a man's skin being peeled off while he was still alive."

    For those more willing to accept this film for what it so blatantly is, I'd say it's an easy, feel-good film with and great 70's soundtrack (from the likes of Bowie and ELO) and superb Welsh accents throughout. A coming-of-age film set in a specific place and moment in British history, it shares an obvious affinity to Ricky Gervais and Stephen Mechant's Cemetery Junction as well as Billy Elliot (a couple of the producers made this film too).

    There are a lot of characters so the attempt to squeeze in all of their individual stories is overly ambitious, but the cast are great. Minnie Driver is easily lovable and I get the feeling you'll be seeing a lot more of Aneurin Barnard's face in the future. The ending is a little bit vague and they try and remedy this by giving a 'where are they now' sequence during the end credits – which is a bit half-baked (no reference to the recreational activities of the time intended).

    Overall, a likable film with some nice messages (namely Karl Marx's sentiment "don't let the b*st*rds grind you down") and a well-polished style that makes for easy watching.

    http://ionlyaskedwhatyouthought.blogspot.com/
    7betty-623-412288

    Believable

    Set in the 70s in South Wales, this film/musical doesn't disappoint. Not only is there a spectacularly eerie arrangement of music but the characters stories are relatable. The problems these teenagers face range from Homosexuality to peer pressure to family tension. What makes it more interesting (though it's a simple idea) is that it's a musical about making a musical. This gives the excuse for the atmospheric soundtrack, sung by the cast themselves. Completely different to any other musical I have seen. The only thing I didn't like were the predictions of the characters lives at the end of the film. This seemed like a desperate attempt to make the film more believable when it already was quite so. Although, I am willing to overlook this as the film is such a good one.
    9ladybug2535

    Love it!

    I thoroughly enjoyed this movie. The storyline and the music brought back fine memories (I was almost the same age in the same time period--and oh how the music took me back). In this the script was VERY successful in conjuring a specific time and place.

    Although I was in the United States rather than Wales, I would have to say our general teen experiences of the times were pretty similar on both sides of the Atlantic. We certainly experienced that same raging uncertainty of being a teen of any time period, but ours was greatly amped up by the extraordinary social upheaval of the 60s and 70s, which could only serve to exacerbate the general fear of what comes next in anyone's teens. This anxiety would be even more potent in a region with rampant unemployment and open class warfare (not to mention the ongoing clash in Ireland of the time).

    The excellent use of music in this film brought out qualities in the songs that were lost when streamed out on the radio waves among the popular playlist of the day, and certainly threw them into a new light, with nuances I'd never before considered. Very effective and in some places, positively poignant. I thought the choices of music were excellent; so much so that I could have easily enjoyed much more of it and more of the film in turn, just on that alone.

    To be truthful, the movie really could have used another half hour or more, just to flesh out the more important characters. There were some interesting people here, but the length of the film gave them-- and in truth the storyline, short shrift. While that could have been addressed by reducing the number of main characters or focusing less on the more extraneous of the story lines, I don't know if I would have in fact enjoyed the film more by doing so. I would have like more of everything to be truthful; more exploration of the characters and their relationships that we were exposed to; more of the film's interpretation of the music put through the lens of of hindsight; and more development and rehearsals of their play--when juxtaposed and compared with the daily lives of the film.

    Certainly not everyone will agree with me, but it was a terrific little film--and I'd like to see more of it. Just more. Not the Hollywood treatment, no, that would alter it's character too much I fear, but just more of what we were given all too briefly. Yes I admit, I may be biased by my own familiarity and nostalgia of the times, but I am not going to apologize for that. I simply Loved it. Loved it. Loved it.

    Oh for.... they wouldn't allow me to capitalize that I "love it". L.O.V.E.D. I.T. I don't understand how anyone can consider this shouting for god's sakes, it's only a voice in your own head powered by your own imagination. No one is shouting! If anything that exclamation point conveys shouting more than capitalizing an entire word. Capitalizing only emphasizes the word or words. Emphasis, not shouting. I would italicize it but that doesn't W.O.R.K. on IMDb's website. If you italicize or even bold letter a word it just comes out with ampersands and all kinds of mixed symbols--but no italics or bold letters. If they fixed that then I wouldn't be tempted to S.H.O.U.T.! Moderators? Do you read these?????
    7rmarb5-1

    Important Historical Moment Experienced Through Soundtrack, Some Inclusion Questions

    Very astute of the submitter in the Character section of the Goofs to remind us that ELO's "Livin' Thing" was not known until later in 1976 as it was released in November along with parent album "A New World Record". "Hunky Dory" is a creature of the late spring of that year.

    Nonetheless, the choice of music in this movie, as a remark, is simply outstanding. It finely captures that moment when the singer songwriter sound of the early 70s was giving way to late glam and early new wave sensibilities (a la Ferry, Bowie, Lee, Drake, Lynne). In fact, a book has been written ("Hollywood Film 1963-1976: Years of Revolution and Reaction") that pinpoints 1976 as the pivot year when the cultural reign of the 60s and early 70s ended.

    As a disclaimer, I don't know what music was being played on the BBC in pre-Thatcher Wales; would she actually have been seen on BBC nightly television in 1976, three years ahead of her ascendancy, as she does in the film? But I do wonder about other culturally significant music of 1976 that might have been overlooked.

    As a leading example, the advent of Queen's "A Night of the Opera," generally acclaimed the Sgt. Peppers of the 70s, plops squarely in May of 1976 when "You're My Best Friend" was picking up steam as the followup single to enormous "Bohemian Rhapsody," and the Elizabethan "39" was starting to haunt the airwaves. Irish heavy rockers Thin Lizzy sprang from regional jail at that moment and John Miles, whose title cut,"Stranger in the City," was a great, if passing, anthem to weary youth in Britain, peaking around April 1976.

    Genesis' "Trick of the Tale" was a breakout commercial LP from 1976, loaded with snappy art-rock tracks, bespeaking a sense of melancholy associated with life change in English youth, though this might have been more suited to highbrow Charterhouse and Ellesmere, the latter featured as bedrock in 1978's Richard Burton vehicle, "Absolution".

    The Rolling Stones released "Black and Blue" in April 1976 carrying a couple of textured, sentimental songs in single "Fool to Cry" and sadly reflective "Memory Motel," both all over the radio then. Too American sounding?

    In the obverse, I question whether Ontario's Rush had really arrived in Wales at that point to the extent that the schoolboys could play, chord for chord, with no charts, a good bit of "Passage to Bangkok" on the brand new "2112" album. If you need a guitar-heavy AOR entry, why not England's Foghat? "Fool for the City" was sitting right there on album playlists in May of 1976.

    Finally, 1976, of course, was the year of Peter Frampton, I am imagining the brilliant live versions of "I Wanna Go to the Sun" or "All I Want To Be (Is By Your Side)" as fitting period citations of prep yearning for flight. I won't mention anything about "Born to Run," the sensation of that stateside season, released several months prior to May of 76, as Middle Atlantic bravado would not sync with "Hunky Dory's" more woozy, Welsh bard effect. Nor would a recent UK platinum smash by The Three Degrees and its spawning movement, (gasp) disco, whose 1975 afterbirth, populated the times.

    As a PostScript, I loved the choices of both "Strange Magic" and "One Summer's Dream," both underrated ELO dreamers. I can't help wanting more ELO from the period (understanding there is only room for two in this multi-artist effort) as their current "Face the Music" sported heady standards like "Nightrider" and "Waterfall"; and if we look back just several months earlier, the "El Dorado" album's ultimate orchestral Beatles paean, "Can't Get it Out of My Head".

    We have only one film here, and "Hunky Dory" made its choices. My curiosity aside, they are fine decisions.

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    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      Minnie Driver's father was from Swansea, Wales.
    • Patzer
      The song Livin' Thing (written by Jeff Lynne, performed by ELO), did not chart in the UK until 13 Nov 1976 and would not have been known during the Summer of 76.
    • Zitate

      Vivienne Mae: Kenny, every line you get right, you gotta think "fuck off" at the end of it. Make every line a "fuck off" to anybody who thinks that Kenny can't be Caliban.

    • Crazy Credits
      All The Car Booters of South Wales (you know who you are)
    • Verbindungen
      References Der unglaubliche Hulk (1977)
    • Soundtracks
      Life On Mars?
      Written by David Bowie

      Performed by Aneurin Barnard

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Hunky Dory?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 2. März 2012 (Vereinigtes Königreich)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Official Facebook
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Hunky Dory
    • Drehorte
      • Swansea, Wales, Vereinigtes Königreich(location)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Film Agency for Wales
      • Wales Creative IP Fund
      • Eyepatch
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    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 20.296 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 7.443 $
      • 24. März 2013
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 139.653 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 50 Min.(110 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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