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IMDbPro

Gregory's Two Girls

  • 1999
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
667
YOUR RATING
Gregory's Two Girls (1999)
Twenty years after his teenage crush on a football-mad schoolgirl, Gregory is back at his old school, teaching English. When two of his pupils uncover evil practices at a local factory they want their teacher to help them expose the wrong-doer, who happens to be Greg's old schoolfriend.
Play trailer1:54
1 Video
15 Photos
Comedy

Twenty years later, Gregory, now an English teacher, is approached by a student suspicious of a local businessman's activities. Obsessed with her, he ignores a colleague's romantic interest ... Read allTwenty years later, Gregory, now an English teacher, is approached by a student suspicious of a local businessman's activities. Obsessed with her, he ignores a colleague's romantic interest while investigating the case.Twenty years later, Gregory, now an English teacher, is approached by a student suspicious of a local businessman's activities. Obsessed with her, he ignores a colleague's romantic interest while investigating the case.

  • Director
    • Bill Forsyth
  • Writer
    • Bill Forsyth
  • Stars
    • Carly McKinnon
    • John Gordon Sinclair
    • John Murtagh
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    667
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bill Forsyth
    • Writer
      • Bill Forsyth
    • Stars
      • Carly McKinnon
      • John Gordon Sinclair
      • John Murtagh
    • 19User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:54
    Trailer

    Photos15

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    Top cast73

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    Carly McKinnon
    • Frances
    John Gordon Sinclair
    John Gordon Sinclair
    • Gregory Underwood
    John Murtagh
    • Headmaster
    Hugh McCue
    • Douglas
    Dougray Scott
    Dougray Scott
    • Fraser Rowan
    Martin Schwab
    Martin Schwab
    • Dimitri
    Maria Doyle Kennedy
    Maria Doyle Kennedy
    • Bel
    Alexander Morton
    Alexander Morton
    • Teacher (Norman)
    William Harkness
    • Courier
    Albert Coulson
    • Bus Driver
    Paul Birchard
    • American Executive
    Simon Huh
    • Asian Executive
    Dawn Steele
    Dawn Steele
    • Jan
    Kevin Anderson
    Kevin Anderson
    • Jon
    Fiona Bell
    • Maddy Underwood
    Constanzo Cacace
    • Italian Restauranteur
    Gary Lewis
    Gary Lewis
    • Mr. McCance
    Anne Kidd
    Anne Kidd
    • Headmaster's Secretary
    • Director
      • Bill Forsyth
    • Writer
      • Bill Forsyth
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    5.1667
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    Featured reviews

    bob the moo

    Deserves points for trying to be much more than an easy "cash-in" sequel but it doesn't work that well as a story

    Gregory Underwood is a secondary school teacher in Scotland now but his relationships with women is no stable than before. Despite the very clear attention of colleague Bel, Gregory prefers to stay at home watching Chomsky tapes and worrying about the general state of the world. Unknown to anyone else he has a major crush on a girl in one of his classes – football player Frances. Despite the risk, when she appears to come onto him he responds only to find that she just wants to talk to him about the fact that a local electronics company appears to be manufacturing torture equipment.

    This film received bad reviews when it came out and I suspect many reviewers (like myself) just disliked the idea of a sequel to such a famous film after so many years had gone by. Of course opening the film with a sex scene between a teacher and a young pupil that is played for laughs was never going to be that good a move – especially in a time when paedophilia is the number one topic for a tabloid witch hunt on any given day. And so I found myself at the start of a very strange film indeed, one that has a teacher/pupil relationship at the core and stuff about corporations and globalisation etc around the edges – suffice to say that this is not just a retread of Gregory's Girl for the sake of making some extra money. However, why Forsyth chose to place this story within a sequel was a mystery to me because it does stand alone so much there appears to be no other reason to connect the two other than raising the money to make it.

    The plot is a strange mix of issues and relationships and it is certainly never dull but this is not to say that it all works because it most certainly does not. It is a messy affair that starts off with the crush but gradually forgets it and instead wanders onto the issue of corporate social responsibility and globalisation but does it in a way that doesn't really ring true or allow for a clear message to be delivered. It is still interesting and I stayed with it for the couple of things that it was trying to do but even at my kindest I can't pretend that it worked out because it didn't. The plot doesn't flow that well and although it is interesting it doesn't stick in the mind as a good narrative or one that pulls anything in particular off.

    The cast are OK and seem to get the light tone of the film even if they don't always seem to know where it is all going either. Sinclair plays his usual character well and manages to keep the audience onside (not as easy as it sounds in this film); however again, did we need him to be called "Gregory" or was it just to get funding? McKinnon is surprisingly assured and gives a very strong performance. Between the two of them they make their scenes work really well, with both of them coming from their different angles well. Support is so-so but not really any better than that – Kennedy, Scott, Murtagh and others are very much secondary to requirements and their performances are a notch below the lead two. Forsyth's direction is good and he injects the film with a feel that is recognisable as him.

    Overall though this is not a film to dislike for being an unnecessary sequel because, in fairness, it is actually a very brave attempt to do something different that unfortunately doesn't come off. The challenging relationship drama that could have been so impacting is gradually lost in a bigger story that never hangs together. Deserves points for trying but sadly it is just not that good a film.
    7bob4kate

    A brave attempt at an original sequel.

    The good thing about this film is that it stands alone - you don't have to have seen the original. Unfortunately this is also it's biggest drawback. It would have been nice to have included a few of the original characters in the new story and seen how their lives had developed. Sinclair as in the original is excellent and provides the films best comic moments as he attempts to deal with awkward and embarrassing situations but the supporting cast is not as strong as in the original movie. Forsyth is to be congratulated on a brave attempt to move the character on and create an original sequel but the film is ultimately flawed and lacks the warmth of the original
    2gramus-29376

    He could never end a movie...

    He COULD never end a movie well...they always came to a grinding, heart-deadening halt.

    But we forgive, given the actors, the characters, unselfconscious dialogue and charming natural feel. The wealth of talent from the Scottish theatre groups at the time.

    The unsatisfactory phone box or Caracas sign marked a depressing end to otherwise enjoyable movies.

    The original Gregory's Girl outpaced The Clash of the Titans. Perhaps deservedly so, but that movie had a structure...and a proper ending.

    I think the fact that the deadening halt came quite early in this movie reveals its quality. Which is a shame given the quality of the actors. I believe Carly McKinnon stopped acting after this - I wish her well in Toronto - but she had that natural feel from earlier films and the makings of a very fine performer.

    Add to this the uncomfortable - and uncomfortable in the 80s - creepiness of some of the themes and I don't think we have a winner here.

    That, and the approaching-the-original "Weather Report on Diazepam" soundtrack, left me feeling entirely empty.
    9lambchopnixon

    Great film, warm, very funny, unexpectedly subversive.

    A shift in outlook is neccesary to enjoy modern British films, one that somehow allows them to be seen in their own right and for their own qualities rather than by the criteria that American films are judged. Britfilm has to try hard to be gritty and finds it hard to make it, but at warmth British films can lord it over their otherwise overwhelming competitor.

    This film fails not in its content but only in attaching itself to the predeccesor, so allowing it to be all to easily seen as the work of star and director somewhere near the end of their tethers. It's a couple of decades later, Gregory teaching and this time with two girls on his mind. He teaches at his school railing against human rights abuses. When students he's fired up find abuses in their midst he must face whether he's just all talk.

    This is a subversive film in that there's not the usual worldly character of any American movie that you expect to do whatever he does, but a naive man boy who may still put everything on the line for principles. Maybe. It's certainly no protest-by-numbers though, being too warm. Where U.S. film may seem realistic because they're urban and gritty, this and other British films of recent years - those that don't try to match America for visceral thrills - are real because British humour reveals truths.
    3kevin c

    STICK WITH THE FIRST (AND THE BEST)

    This film is a travesty, and isn't fit to keep company with the superior original. The plot is an absolute mess, and the film is way too long. Everytime they're struggling, they desperately inject a sentimental reminder from the first film.

    "Gregory's Girl" is one of the top 10 British films of all time, this one is awful.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      As of 2023, this is the most recent film that Bill Forsyth has directed.
    • Quotes

      [in a meeting with the headmaster and the police, Greg is waffling about watching badgers to explain why he was seen with Frances in the park late at night]

      Detective Gorrie: So what were you doing last night?

      Gregory Underwood: Well last night was pretty exciting, actually, because Frances had more or less promised us... You see, the thing is, I've never actually seen Frances's beaver.

      [embarrassed silence]

      Gregory Underwood: "Frances's beaver"! I mean Frances's badger.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Double Jeopardy/Jakob the Liar/Mumford (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      If I Loved You
      Written by Astrid Williamson

      Performed by Astrid

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 15, 1999 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Germany
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Две девушки Грегори
    • Filming locations
      • St Margaret's Academy, Livingston, West Lothian, Scotland, UK
    • Production companies
      • Channel Four Films
      • Scottish Arts Council Lottery Fund
      • Young Lake
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 56 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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