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Bright Young Things

  • 2003
  • R
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
6.7K
YOUR RATING
Guy Henry, James McAvoy, Emily Mortimer, Michael Sheen, Fenella Woolgar, and Stephen Campbell Moore in Bright Young Things (2003)
Theatrical Trailer from Think Film, Inc
Play trailer2:21
7 Videos
56 Photos
Period DramaComedyDramaWar

An adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's novel "Vile Bodies", is a look into the lives of a young novelist, his would-be lover, and a host of young people who beautified London in the 1930s.An adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's novel "Vile Bodies", is a look into the lives of a young novelist, his would-be lover, and a host of young people who beautified London in the 1930s.An adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's novel "Vile Bodies", is a look into the lives of a young novelist, his would-be lover, and a host of young people who beautified London in the 1930s.

  • Director
    • Stephen Fry
  • Writers
    • Stephen Fry
    • Evelyn Waugh
  • Stars
    • Stephen Campbell Moore
    • Emily Mortimer
    • Dan Aykroyd
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    6.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stephen Fry
    • Writers
      • Stephen Fry
      • Evelyn Waugh
    • Stars
      • Stephen Campbell Moore
      • Emily Mortimer
      • Dan Aykroyd
    • 70User reviews
    • 24Critic reviews
    • 64Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 nominations total

    Videos7

    Bright Young Things
    Trailer 2:21
    Bright Young Things
    Bright Young Things
    Trailer 2:15
    Bright Young Things
    Bright Young Things
    Trailer 2:15
    Bright Young Things
    Bright Young Things Scene: Scene 2
    Clip 1:48
    Bright Young Things Scene: Scene 2
    Bright Young Things Scene: Scene 1
    Clip 2:08
    Bright Young Things Scene: Scene 1
    Bright Young Things Scene: Scene 4
    Clip 2:20
    Bright Young Things Scene: Scene 4
    Bright Young Things Scene: Scene 3
    Clip 2:14
    Bright Young Things Scene: Scene 3

    Photos56

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    Top cast69

    Edit
    Stephen Campbell Moore
    Stephen Campbell Moore
    • Adam
    Emily Mortimer
    Emily Mortimer
    • Nina
    Dan Aykroyd
    Dan Aykroyd
    • Lord Monomark
    Simon McBurney
    Simon McBurney
    • Sneath (Photo-Rat)
    Michael Sheen
    Michael Sheen
    • Miles Maitland
    James McAvoy
    James McAvoy
    • Simon Balcairn
    Stockard Channing
    Stockard Channing
    • Mrs. Melrose Ape
    Adrian Scarborough
    Adrian Scarborough
    • Customs Officer
    Jim Carter
    Jim Carter
    • Chief Customs Officer
    Fenella Woolgar
    Fenella Woolgar
    • Agatha
    Julia McKenzie
    Julia McKenzie
    • Lottie Crump
    Bruno Lastra
    Bruno Lastra
    • Basilio
    David Tennant
    David Tennant
    • Ginger Littlejohn
    Jim Broadbent
    Jim Broadbent
    • The Drunken Major
    John Franklyn-Robbins
    John Franklyn-Robbins
    • Judge
    Simon Callow
    Simon Callow
    • King of Anatolia
    Guy Henry
    Guy Henry
    • Archie
    Al Barclay
    Al Barclay
    • Vanburgh
    • (as Alex Barclay)
    • Director
      • Stephen Fry
    • Writers
      • Stephen Fry
      • Evelyn Waugh
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews70

    6.56.6K
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    Featured reviews

    6B24

    An Age of Excess Revisited

    A most notable characteristic of this film is that it rather zanily merges the 1920's with the 1930's. That historical distortion may seem a slight defect to some viewers choosing to concentrate on a broader stage involving the upper class in its last throes of excess, but for me it destroys the underlying plot. The years before the Great Depression -- the Roaring 20's -- were sui generis. Moving everything forward to events as late as 1940 is a forced element that simply fails.

    Otherwise, there are some bright young moments here. Character actors do indeed steal the show, even if some are given throw-away roles. If only there were better and more believable development of various interactions between the leads, it would make for compelling drama; but we are treated instead to campy olio resolving itself into a strange conclusion, somewhat surreal. For example, the business between Adam and Ginger having to do with money as WWII rages on is misplaced farce -- even if the audience assumes a generous disposition of credulity.

    Little wonder outsiders looking in have a difficult time with this film, not to mention us history buffs.
    ekotan

    A must-see

    What a fantastic movie, delightfully charming, unrelentingly affable and irresistibly likable. Brilliant acting, excellent realisation and direction; this movie was a joy to watch. A bittersweet love story interwoven with a hilarious array of eccentric English upper class characters from the early 20th century.

    Watch out for many faces in small but unforgettable parts, I especially adored Dan Aykroyd's, Michael Sheen's and Jim Broadbent's characters. Fenella Woolgar was also perfect and immensely likable in her role as the dazed and confused but eternally cheerful and optimistic eccentric. Emily Mortimer was flawless as the English rose stuck between marrying money or sticking with her penniless true love. There was palpable chemistry between her and Stephen Campbell Moore's character, which made the whole story work for me.

    And of course Peter O'Toole steals the film with barely five minutes of total screen time, but that's the kind of talent he was gifted with. Watch it if you enjoy witty dialogue, period pieces and don't you dare miss it if you're a Stephen Fry fan. He is a very funny man and his direction which remains always affectionate towards the characters he's portraying in his movie, was impressive given he's better known as an actor and writer.

    If you liked this movie, you would also like:

    • Enchanted April - A Month By The Lake - Widows Peak - In The Bleak Midwinter - A Room With A View


    All of these are in my list of top ten favourite films of all time. Bright Young Things just misses the mark to join them, but it's definitely in my top twenty.
    6imagiking

    Bright Young Things: Slight Disappointment

    As one of the best assets humanity can boast to count among itself, Stephen Fry has delighted the world across a vast array of media, firmly establishing himself as one of my very favourite entertainers. How then, you ask, could it have taken me so unforgivably long to sample his Bright Young Things?

    Having just penned the novel from which the film takes its name, Adam Symes is crestfallen to have it taken from him by customs as contraband literature. He returns to his life of yuppie indulgence (if indeed the film's '30s/'40s setting will permit the usage of that term) where he is variously delighted and disappointed by the tide-like fortunes of his financial situation, and the uncertainty concerning his ability to wed his beloved Nina.

    Beginning with an expository reporter attempting to gain access to a lascivious and drug fuelled party, Bright Young Things launches us into the wild party lifestyle of its central cast of characters. The cocaine and absinthe combinations proclaimed by Nina as boring impress upon us the extent of the inter-war indulgence of the London youth. Things are somewhat slow to start, though the positively delightful and flowery banter of Fry's script keeps us both amused and entranced by the language of the era. Humour comes spouting from the supporting cast: the likes of Fenella Woolgar and Michael Sheen lend more laughs than the main acts themselves, who are generally left to present the dramatic front of the movie. Without doubt the film's best factor is the scene in which the hopeful Symes visits his father-in-law-to-be, a crackpot lunatic played splendidly by Peter O' Toole. As the running time finds itself elapsed, the drama begins to more firmly announce its presence to us, the stakes yet again raised and the outcome looking ever more bleak. The problem is that this never reaches a sufficient and acceptable zenith. No point of conclusion is reached wherein the characters seem to transform beyond the horrid snobs they began life before our eyes as, a shame given the potential this may have had. Not, that is to say, that the characters are unlikeable. In spite of their vices they grow upon us and become endeared to us, though we look on like disappointed parents, hopefully awaiting the time when they will learn the folly of their ways and grow up, a time the film never presents, or at least not expressly enough. I understand the novel on which the film is based takes this more desired route, the film's distance from this perhaps the product of Fry's wishes to carve his own story. In any case, despite the slight disappointment of the lack of redemption, the film is consistent in its humorous and dramatic elements, which blend together to give a decent slice of entertainment.

    Almost certainly less good than it could and should have been, Bright Young Things feels like it fell at the last hurdle. That said, it was never at the front of the race. A perfectly competent debut from Mr Fry, one cannot disagree that the film holds its own.
    noralee

    An Acid Satire With Serious Pretensions

    "Bright Young Things" is a mostly effective satire, with some jarring seriousness thrown in, of "Masterpiece Theater" Jazz Age costume dramas for its first seven-eighths.

    Set in the same period as "Gosford Park," its conflicts are just within the sexual and financial eccentricities of the empty-headed leisure and wannabe leisure class, where titles don't match income or outflow.

    It is more of a visual evocation of Noel Coward songs and incorporates some of his numbers, as well as original sound-alike songs. The frolics have some similarities to the simultaneous Weimar Republic portrayed in "Cabaret."

    Stephen Campbell Moore as the protagonist is almost too good in his film debut, as his character's captivatingly serious eyes and demeanor conflict with his insouciant company, particularly Emily Mortimer as his dispassionate lover, though that justifies the stuck-on denouement, that even without having read the Evelyn Waugh book this is adapted from, "Vile Bodies," I can tell didn't have this too neat and comeuppance tying-up.

    The most pointed parts of the movie are its acid documentation of the birth of the tabloid gossip press, including Dan Ackroyd as a Canadian press baron with a more than passing resemblance to today's lords of Fleet Street. James McAvoy is very good as a more upper-class betraying precursor to his scandal-seeking scion reporter in the mini-series "State of Play," and manages to seem like a real person, unlike so many of the characters who are just types or plot conveniences.

    The production design and costumes are delightful.
    alexandra-25

    Manic Depressive.

    The film Bright Young Things, adapted from Evelyne Waugh's acclaimed fable; Vile Bodies is manic in its pace. As such it is reminiscent of His Girl Friday (1940) with its legendary speed of comedy delivery. The difference with His Girl Friday the speed of the comedy delivery is applied to loquaciousness with a bit of slap stick. Director Stephen Fry of Bright Young Things on the other hand utilises speed to articulate the decadence of the period. As such he is affective in his endeavour of making his point of a decadent aristocracy.

    The depressing aspect of the film is that the aristocracy are portrayed as decadent party animals, unlike the poor who in their pursuit of escaping their worries are (in today's post modern Britain) often labelled as 'feckless' by the tabloid press. But as the impoverished poor struggled to feed themselves across Europe during the inter-war period, the aristocracy idly carried on without social conscience or obligation to responsibility. Such decadence at the expense of the poor contributed towards the rise of extreme politics in Europe during the 1920s.

    Contributing to the masses' public perception of the idle rich decadence of the inter-war period was the tabloid press. The press baron in the film is shown as suppressing the realities of the issues affecting the ordinary people of Britain for profit, and thereby concealing truth.

    While Fry adeptly captures the decadence of the 20s in Bright Young Things, Peter O'Toole steels the film with his outstanding satirising of the stereotypical English eccentric. As the eccentric of the upper classes O'Toole's character Colnol Blout is the epitome of English two faced diplomacy of the ruling classes. The example being when he writes a cheque out for £1000 to help his prospective son-in-law to marry his daughter, when he signs it in the name of Charlie Chaplin. A typical English snub no less!

    Excellent film, well acted and brilliantly directed.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This is the only film directed by Sir Stephen Fry.
    • Goofs
      A gramophone record of Noel Coward's "Nina" is played in the section before World War II breaks out. Coward didn't record the song until 1945.
    • Quotes

      Ginger Littlejohn: What I'm about to say is that what I'm about to say may sound unpleasant, y'know, and all that, but look here, y'know, dammit. I mean, the better man has won. Not, um, that I'm saying that I'm the better man, I wouldn't say that for a moment, awful bad luck on you and all but still, when you come to think of it I mean look here, y'know. Dammit. Do you see what I mean?

    • Crazy credits
      The end credits list the actors one or two at a time, showing pictures of their characters in the film along with their names, which is called "end credits roll call," which can be simply added to "Keywords" section.
    • Connections
      Featured in Stephen Fry: Director Documentary (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      Sing Sing Sing
      Written by Louis Prima

      Performed by The Not So Bright Young Things

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 3, 2003 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Сяюча молодь
    • Filming locations
      • Port of Tilbury, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • The Film Consortium
      • UK Film Council
      • Visionview Production
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $933,637
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $46,926
      • Aug 22, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,905,499
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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