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6,8/10
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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTwo Scottish friends become local folk heroes and tourist attractions when they start holding up tour buses with novelty items.Two Scottish friends become local folk heroes and tourist attractions when they start holding up tour buses with novelty items.Two Scottish friends become local folk heroes and tourist attractions when they start holding up tour buses with novelty items.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
Ann Scott-Jones
- Will's Mother
- (as Anne Scott-Jones)
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For Americans, it might take a "wee bit" of getting use to the Scottish accents, but this loopy, off-beat picture is so good and so entertaining, the viewer just sits back and takes it all in. Two boys who work at a Magic Store by day make their own "magic" as they rob tourist buses after work. Ned Beatty is fine, as always. This film is a real gem: the kind you just wish would get more publicity so that so many more would see and enjoy it. Savor it--and tell your friends!
It takes a lot to get around the alarmingly 80's Edinburgh featured in this movie. A lot has changed since then and since the movie is about 2 guys who are bored with their lives, the city scenes are shot in the most drab and depressing way possible. This only accentuates their adventures in the countryside.
Basically Ronnie and Will are on the edge. They hate their lives so much and decide that a little highway robbery in the highlands would be just the fun they are looking for. What begins as a little fun soon leads to them becoming local heroes and, by the end, immortal legends.
With good characters, some funny scenes and a nice feel-good factor towards the end, Restless Natives makes for easily diverting entertainment. It's long, long out of print and ancient VHS ex-rental copies go for £135 at online auction sites. I think a DVD release is rather overdue. I hope it comes in widescreen when it does. I am unsure or the original aspect ratio but the copy I saw was in pan and scan and the lack of wide shot in the countryside scenes felt awkward and disorientating.
The mangled Glaswegian accents did NOT fit the Edinburgh setting though.
Basically Ronnie and Will are on the edge. They hate their lives so much and decide that a little highway robbery in the highlands would be just the fun they are looking for. What begins as a little fun soon leads to them becoming local heroes and, by the end, immortal legends.
With good characters, some funny scenes and a nice feel-good factor towards the end, Restless Natives makes for easily diverting entertainment. It's long, long out of print and ancient VHS ex-rental copies go for £135 at online auction sites. I think a DVD release is rather overdue. I hope it comes in widescreen when it does. I am unsure or the original aspect ratio but the copy I saw was in pan and scan and the lack of wide shot in the countryside scenes felt awkward and disorientating.
The mangled Glaswegian accents did NOT fit the Edinburgh setting though.
Restless Natives is a lovely little curiosity of a film from Scotland. I first discovered the film as a kid and had watched it about 4 times, and had very fond memories of it. On seeing it again recently, I think it is a minor masterpiece of Scottish Comedy. Great idea, fun script, charming acting, good supporting cast, great uplifting music from Big Country and beautiful locations. As a Scotsman, we always get a bit patriotic seeing Scottish locations and hearing Scottish accents in films, and this doesn't disappoint. Forget Braveheart, this is a film that makes me proud to be a Scot. Now, I'm not saying this is by any means a brilliant film... I'm saying that if you like your comedies quirky, silly, fun and with a bit of heart then this is for you. Fantastic acting from Vincent Friell, Joe Mullaney, Bernard Hill, Robert Urquart and Ned Beatty. This film is great, I urge anyone who has seen it years ago to go and get the DVD when it comes out - you won't be disappointed. Favourite moments have to be Vincent's sweeping in the park, the cop in the joke shop, any scene with Ned Beatty and that brilliant chase across Scotland at the end. Yes, there are plenty of weak points in this film too but it makes me smile so much I don't care.
Yes, if you didn't already know, the excellent soundtrack of this film was composed by Stuart Adamson and performed by his band Big Country. We'll get to that in a minute. "Restless Natives" is a cute, quirky, distinctly Scottish comedy about 2 young losers who flirt with a life of crime, only to become national heroes for it.
The presentation is wonderfully absurd. Don't expect realism. Don't raise any eyebrows when our 2 anti-heroes rob scores of people using pink plastic toy guns. And don't scoff when the victims of their robberies swoon in admiration as if they'd just met the Jonas Brothers. This film immerses us in a farcical universe where people act & react strangely, and it's that farcical presentation that makes us realize that perhaps this story is a deeper allegory, a satire about the cult of personality the way the classic "Bonnie & Clyde" (1967) hit us.
Being set in Scotland, a country that prides itself in a history of rebels, rogues and rapscallions, "Restless Natives" is almost believable--that a pair of lovable loser criminals could become mythical heroes overnight--and that's what makes this film extra fun. There is no real malice, no heavy moralizing, no contrived melodrama. It's like a clean, modern fable from start to finish. Scotland style.
And that leads me to the soundtrack as promised. If you're not familiar with the magic of the 80s-90s band "Big Country" then get familiar asap. Famous for their distant bagpipe-sounding guitars and traditional highland folk melodies and rhythms, the music compliments the story as well as the glorious landscapes prominently featured in the film. Big Country fans will instantly recognize Stuart's e-bow guitar melodies (reminiscent of the song "The Storm") as well as the band's distinct 6/8 drum beats, melodic bass parts and percussive guitar rhythms that we heard all over their 1983 debut album "The Crossing". Most of the music here is instrumental, but there is one great song "Restless Natives" near the end where Stuart sings, and the final scenes of stunning landscape are perfectly complimented by the song "Come Back to Me" from BC's 2nd album. Much like Queen's iconic soundtrack to "Flash Gordon" (1980), Big Country's sound is clearly stamped on this film in the same memorable way.
"Restless Natives" was a big hit in Scotland though I never heard a peep about it in the USA. I suppose 1985 was a busy year in American theaters with the likes of "The Breakfast Club", "Weird Science" and my favorite teen comedy "Better Off Dead" (incidentally the star of this film Vincent Friell bears a striking resemblence to John Cusack, including the perpetual deer-in-the-headlights stare). So congratulate yourself for stumbling on this obscure gem. Don't miss it!
The presentation is wonderfully absurd. Don't expect realism. Don't raise any eyebrows when our 2 anti-heroes rob scores of people using pink plastic toy guns. And don't scoff when the victims of their robberies swoon in admiration as if they'd just met the Jonas Brothers. This film immerses us in a farcical universe where people act & react strangely, and it's that farcical presentation that makes us realize that perhaps this story is a deeper allegory, a satire about the cult of personality the way the classic "Bonnie & Clyde" (1967) hit us.
Being set in Scotland, a country that prides itself in a history of rebels, rogues and rapscallions, "Restless Natives" is almost believable--that a pair of lovable loser criminals could become mythical heroes overnight--and that's what makes this film extra fun. There is no real malice, no heavy moralizing, no contrived melodrama. It's like a clean, modern fable from start to finish. Scotland style.
And that leads me to the soundtrack as promised. If you're not familiar with the magic of the 80s-90s band "Big Country" then get familiar asap. Famous for their distant bagpipe-sounding guitars and traditional highland folk melodies and rhythms, the music compliments the story as well as the glorious landscapes prominently featured in the film. Big Country fans will instantly recognize Stuart's e-bow guitar melodies (reminiscent of the song "The Storm") as well as the band's distinct 6/8 drum beats, melodic bass parts and percussive guitar rhythms that we heard all over their 1983 debut album "The Crossing". Most of the music here is instrumental, but there is one great song "Restless Natives" near the end where Stuart sings, and the final scenes of stunning landscape are perfectly complimented by the song "Come Back to Me" from BC's 2nd album. Much like Queen's iconic soundtrack to "Flash Gordon" (1980), Big Country's sound is clearly stamped on this film in the same memorable way.
"Restless Natives" was a big hit in Scotland though I never heard a peep about it in the USA. I suppose 1985 was a busy year in American theaters with the likes of "The Breakfast Club", "Weird Science" and my favorite teen comedy "Better Off Dead" (incidentally the star of this film Vincent Friell bears a striking resemblence to John Cusack, including the perpetual deer-in-the-headlights stare). So congratulate yourself for stumbling on this obscure gem. Don't miss it!
This is the kind of film that always cracks a smile on your dial. It's cute without being irritating, it's stupid without being offensive - it's all you want in an old fashioned comedy. And the accents are like honey lozengers; infact this is the very film you should watch if you are ill, or recovering from a hangover wrapped in a blanket infront of the TV. And the soundtrack by Big Country is an absolute hoot! What a film!!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesScottish band 'Big Country' wrote and performed the majority of the soundtrack.
- GaffesWhile the film is set in Edinburgh, the graveyard featured is the Glasgow Necropolis.
- Bandes originalesScotland the Brave
(uncredited)
Traditional
Arranged by Jim Johnstone
Chappell Recorded Music Library
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Die Touristenfalle
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 29min(89 min)
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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