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My Beautiful Laundrette

  • 1985
  • R
  • 1h 37m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,8/10
18 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
1 568
4 356
Daniel Day-Lewis and Gordon Warnecke in My Beautiful Laundrette (1985)
An ambitious Pakistani Briton and his white boyfriend strive for success and hope when they open a glamorous laundromat.
Liretrailer2 min 02 s
2 vidéos
99+ photos
ComédieDrameRomanceComédie noireLe passage à l’âge adulte

Un Britannique pakistanais ambitieux et son petit ami blanc s'efforcent de réussir lorsqu'ils ouvrent une laverie glamour.Un Britannique pakistanais ambitieux et son petit ami blanc s'efforcent de réussir lorsqu'ils ouvrent une laverie glamour.Un Britannique pakistanais ambitieux et son petit ami blanc s'efforcent de réussir lorsqu'ils ouvrent une laverie glamour.

  • Director
    • Stephen Frears
  • Writer
    • Hanif Kureishi
  • Stars
    • Saeed Jaffrey
    • Roshan Seth
    • Daniel Day-Lewis
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,8/10
    18 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    1 568
    4 356
    • Director
      • Stephen Frears
    • Writer
      • Hanif Kureishi
    • Stars
      • Saeed Jaffrey
      • Roshan Seth
      • Daniel Day-Lewis
    • 89Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 34Commentaires de critiques
    • 75Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 oscar
      • 6 victoires et 6 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:02
    Official Trailer
    Top 5 Forbidden-Love Films With 'Disobedience' Star Alessandro Nivola
    Video 2:33
    Top 5 Forbidden-Love Films With 'Disobedience' Star Alessandro Nivola
    Top 5 Forbidden-Love Films With 'Disobedience' Star Alessandro Nivola
    Video 2:33
    Top 5 Forbidden-Love Films With 'Disobedience' Star Alessandro Nivola

    Photos127

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    Rôles principaux33

    Modifier
    Saeed Jaffrey
    Saeed Jaffrey
    • Nasser
    Roshan Seth
    Roshan Seth
    • Papa
    Daniel Day-Lewis
    Daniel Day-Lewis
    • Johnny
    • (as Daniel Day Lewis)
    Richard Graham
    Richard Graham
    • Genghis
    Winston Graham
    • Jamaican One
    Dudley Thomas
    • Jamaican Two
    Derrick Branche
    Derrick Branche
    • Salim
    Garry Cooper
    Garry Cooper
    • Squatter
    Gordon Warnecke
    Gordon Warnecke
    • Omar
    Shirley Anne Field
    Shirley Anne Field
    • Rachel
    Charu Bala Chokshi
    • Bilquis
    • (as Charu Bala Choksi)
    Souad Faress
    Souad Faress
    • Cherry
    Rita Wolf
    Rita Wolf
    • Tania
    Persis Maravala
    • Nasser's Elder Daughter
    Nisha Kapur
    • Nasser's Younger Daughter
    Neil Cunningham
    • Englishman
    Walter Donohue
    • Dick O'Donnell
    Gurdial Sira
    • Zaki
    • Director
      • Stephen Frears
    • Writer
      • Hanif Kureishi
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs89

    6,818.2K
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    10

    Avis en vedette

    MartinInane

    Politics, Sex, and Punk Rock

    Want to see a side of London you won't get from any other director? Then watch My Beautiful Launderette... The film opens with a scene in which squatters are forcibly evicted from a derelict building. Londoner viewers will recognize this as a sad yet common event... Immediately, we are attuned to the political bent of the movie. Fortunately for that intent, the dialogue in the film is intelligently written (note: this will not appeal to the lowest common denominator -- it scores low on commercial appeal). Unfortunately, the often "stiff" delivery of that dialogue is a significant impediment. That said, Daniel Day Lewis lends a powerful presence to his role as the punk squatter, Johnny.

    The climax of the film aptly integrates the various tensions in the film: political, sexual, and social. We're surprised with a love scene between Johnny and Omar which is well-paced, erotic, and genuine.
    Nic-8

    A perfect slice of Thatcherite Britain.....oh! And a fab gay romance..

    A classic film in my book, My Beautiful Laundrette is the story of Omar, a young restless Asian man caring for his alcoholic father in Thatcherite London. Escape comes in the form of his uncles many and varied business ventures,...

    Anyone who experienced anything of life in '80's Britain will recognise the craving for instant financial success. Similarly I am sure Asian viewers will recognise the struggles inherent in finding an identity in a country which is your home but which can never feel quite like your real home.

    Omar dreams of success so works to achieve it...along the way he meets up with old school-friend Johnny, who has betrayed him by falling in with a group of neo-nazi's. Omar soon has Johnny working for him and his uncle. Turning the tables on him as he is made to rely on the very people he has been taught to hate. The chemistry between Omar and Johnny is palpable and their relationship handled totally matter-of-factly. About the only part of the film not trying to score any political points is the gay relationship. There is a "so-what" attitude and no-one comes out at any point. And why should they?

    Tension in the film is far more the result of socio-economic and racial inequalities. The whole thing is handled with grace, charm and wit. Anyone remotely familier with British film in particular will note the starry casting of supporting roles, though Danial Day Lewis is - now - the biggest star of the show. Here he shows the real substance behind his fame - more so than in any other film of his seen to date. The cast is universally excellent and the unique shooting, pacing and dialogue, quite quite brilliant.

    Some of the shots in this film could be used as a template for brilliance...An unexpected kiss in a dark alley is easily the most erotic single shot I have seen in a film.

    Despite a few reviews I have read claiming otherwise, I don't believe you need to be gay or Asian to get something out of this picture. Living in Britain may help, though it's a lot less than essential.......

    And hey! Wouldn't you love to throw your knickers into the washing machines of a neon-lit music-filled laudrette from heaven run by two insatiably young and energetic lovers?

    Well I would anyway! Pass the detergent this way please!
    faziners

    Kureishi at his best

    Johnny and Omar live in a world of multiple cogenerating, coexisting, modifying, negating, enforcing and enhancing forms of discrimination -- racism, sexism, groupism, homophobia, cultural elitism, snobbery, reverse colonialism, neocolonialism and fascism -- which they successfully grapple and topple in the form of their launderette with the power of economic enterprise. These squabbling goblins are left to each others excesses as economic success lifts them up and out of these, but many questions remain: will they remain; would others succeed; what does luck have to do with it? Kureshi has pissed off all groups who find themselves part of this smashing satire, prime among them the identity conscious confused second/third generation Subcontinental British kids, the same contingency that staunchly supported the Rushdie fatwa. Brilliant and stupendously enjoyable.
    Chrysanthepop

    What A Laundrette!

    'My Beautiful Laundrette' takes a look at the 80's local life within the Asian communities in England and between the British Southeast Asians and the British Caucasians. What I loved about this film is that it presents its themes without going overboard to explain or to resolve anything. When we see a relationship develop between Omar and Johnny, one would expect to see them get attacked for it and then expect a preachy message like gays have rights too but there is nothing like that. There are scenes where the British Asians are being humiliated but this too does not lead to a bloodbath of sorts. It is all downplayed and subtle. It's about the characters, rather than a social message (but that's there too).

    'My Beautiful Laundrette' mainly centres around Omar and his relationship with Johnny. Hanif Kureishi is known for telling tales about unconventional relationships and I thought it was great that both characters were shown to be open about their relationships in spite of their background. I mean they weren't screaming from the roof or anything but these two individuals did not care what others would think concerning their relationships. Frears deserves full marks for telling the story in such a raw, real, humorous and coherent way. The humour too is subtle and dry and flows well through the story.

    The renovated laundrette too plays a crucial role. It is a place of comfort for Omar and Johnny, kind of like a home they built and decorated. The customers are amused by the beauty of it. A fascinated Nasser dances with his girlfriend while the customers eagerly wait outside. Thus, it becomes a place of comfort for many.

    The characters are well etched. Both their strength and fragility is well displayed by the actors. Daniel Day-Lewis and Gordon Warnecke are excellent as Johnny and Omar. Day-Lewis brilliantly brings out Johnny's vulnerable and passionate side while on the exterior he appears as a tough and scary guy. Likewise Warnecke too effectively portrays Omar's determination and passion. A charismatic Saeed Jaffrey is phenomenal as the cheerful helpful uncle who goes through his own transformation. Rita Wolf is wonderful as the daughter who's in search of her own identity. Roshan Seth is good as the whiny father. The rest of the cast do well.

    Pretty much all the characters are in search of something except that Omar and Johnny find what they want and Nasser loses what he had. The film does not end by providing a solution for everyone. And that is one of the many brilliance of it as it reflects that everyone has their own life to deal with and questions will arise but life goes on and it is up to us to choose the answer.

    Simply great.
    absinthe123

    My Beautiful Daniel Day Lewis!

    It bugs me that this movie is the "gay" movie, just like it bugs me when a movie with black people is labeled the "black" movie. What about Mafia movies? Are those for people who are "involved"? What about "Seven" I guess that's a cult classic for serial killers. Come on, a good movie is a good movie. Trust me I identified with Omar - and I'm a straight hispanic girl - probably more than I have with any other character in a movie. This movie is about homosexuality like Charlotte Gray is about hair dye.

    This movie is definitely one of my favorites. It is a look a young man (a gorgeous Pakistani named Omar) who basically tries to balance being Pakistani and British at the same time. He wants to have a business and be successful, in that Western capitalist way, and yet he wants to be good to his family and his father in that sense of family loyalty that only those of us from other cultures really understand. Omar asks his uncle to tell stories about his family in Pakistan, yet he doesn't understand his people's language - Urdu, I believe it is. This is a little insight for our white friends about what us "in-betweens" have to go through. Too ethnic for the white people, too white for our own people. It's nice to show the ethnic people looking down on the poor whites, because we do, we look down on low class white people, we have our snobbery too. It may not be right, but it's the truth. It's nice to show the sort of affectionate annoyance Omar found his Papa and Nasser for trying to help him. White people see that as overbearing, something to "escape" from (like Tania, who was the "whitest" of them all) Ethnic people have a sense of humor about it, because we know it means love, and like Omar most of us just choose to quietly listen and ignore their advice rather than make a scene. Omar never makes a scene.

    That's what Johnny represents I think, the part of us we keep to ourselves, our passions and desire and those things that are too special to share, kind of like a spiritual belief. It makes their love seem almost sacred because it's too special for them to bring out and expose to the criticism of less enlightened people. It's worth noting that it's Johnny who kisses Omar semi-openly in the street, and it's Omar who doesn't tell his family why he can't marry Tania. I dont think it's so much homophobia as it a cultural difference as to what should be kept private. I could sort of see Johnny in the future demaning Omar tell his family.

    Their love scene is gorgeous. When you first see Johnny he seems so rough and coarse and low class, but as he begins to seduce Omar while Omar talks about the past he suddenly seems powerful and sophisticated and . . . and just to see them getting it on on the table. It's very sweet and tender with the frantic kissing and the champange, but my god is it hot.

    This certainly is a romantic (and more importantly) positive movie where two men are in love yet have a real conflict between them, and obviously gay men are right to love that, but hey, it works for informing white people, making minorities laugh, British people who grew up during that time, showing idiot homophobes that gay people are just the same as everyone else, DDL fans. Don't just slap the gay label on it and dismiss it!

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      This film and A Room with a View (1985) both opened in New York on the same day, March 7, 1986. Both movies featured Daniel Day-Lewis in prominent and very different roles: in A Room with a View, he played a repressed, snobbish Edwardian upperclassman, while in Laundrette, he played a lower-class gay ex-skinhead in love with an ambitious Pakistani businessman in Thatcher's London. When American critics saw Day-Lewis, who was then virtually unknown in the US, in two such different roles on the same day, many (including Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times and Sheila Benson of the LA Times) raved about the talent it must have taken him to play such vastly different characters. In his review of My Beautiful Laundrette, Roger Ebert wrote, "A movie like this lives or dies with its performances, and the actors in 'My Beautiful Laundrette' are a fascinating group of unknowns.... The character of Johnny may cause you to blink if you've just seen the wonderful 'A Room with a View.' He is played by Daniel Day-Lewis, the same actor who, in 'Room,' plays the heroine's affected fiancee, Cecil. Seeing these two performances side by side is an affirmation of the miracle of acting: That one man could play these two opposites is astonishing."
    • Citations

      Johnny: Ain't nothing I can say to make it up to you. There's only things I can do to show you... That I am with you.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Hooray for Holyrood (1986)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is My Beautiful Laundrette?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 16 novembre 1985 (United Kingdom)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United Kingdom
    • Langues
      • English
      • Urdu
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Mein wunderbarer Waschsalon
    • Lieux de tournage
      • 245 Queenstown Road, Battersea, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(papa's flat)
    • sociétés de production
      • Working Title Films
      • SAF Productions
      • Channel Four Films
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 650 000 £ (estimation)
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 2 451 545 $ US
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 2 462 508 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 37 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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