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The Alcohol Years

  • 2000
  • 50m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
135
YOUR RATING
Everyday Something (2002)
Documentary

When artist, musician, writer and filmmaker Carol Morley was twenty-one she left her hometown of Manchester and did not return for twelve years. Growing up in the 80s, she began drinking hea... Read allWhen artist, musician, writer and filmmaker Carol Morley was twenty-one she left her hometown of Manchester and did not return for twelve years. Growing up in the 80s, she began drinking heavily at sixteen and frequented clubs such as the Hacienda whilst also fronting her own gir... Read allWhen artist, musician, writer and filmmaker Carol Morley was twenty-one she left her hometown of Manchester and did not return for twelve years. Growing up in the 80s, she began drinking heavily at sixteen and frequented clubs such as the Hacienda whilst also fronting her own girl punk outfit. With her memories of the period fuzzy, she returns to the city to find out ... Read all

  • Director
    • Carol Morley
  • Stars
    • Andrew Berry
    • Adam Chodzko
    • Bob Dickinson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    135
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Carol Morley
    • Stars
      • Andrew Berry
      • Adam Chodzko
      • Bob Dickinson
    • 9User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos1

    View Poster

    Top cast30

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    Andrew Berry
    Andrew Berry
    • Self
    Adam Chodzko
    • Self
    Bob Dickinson
    • Self
    Charlotte Dobson
    Tony Emsley
    • Self
    Susan Ferguson
    • Self
    Stella Grundy
    • Self
    Douglas Hart
    • Self
    Dave Haslam
    • Self
    Howard Jones
    • Self
    Franke Lane
    • Self
    Tony Martin
    • Self
    Vinnie McCabe
    Vinnie McCabe
      Bruce Mitchell
      • Self
      Aubrey Monkes
      • Self
      Liz Naylor
      • Self
      Brendan O'Brien
      • Self
      Kym Pople
      • Self
      • Director
        • Carol Morley
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews9

      6.5135
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      Featured reviews

      moth >i<

      Alcohol Years From the Outside looking In.

      Carol Morley of Manchester, England, with unabashed narcissism filmed people talking about her youth. She was blond, slept around, drank too much, had wild friends and big boobs and might even be charismatic. Fascinating.

      Movie has parental guidance warnings but actually it could let teens live the scene vicariously, from the end viewpoint, so they can do something different with their youth. Morley herself didn't have much parental guidance. Her father killed himself and wasn't around to have any input.

      She was a wild girl and now teaches film making. She pulled it together.

      There are friends from my youth that I would love to watch a multi-angled analysis of so I don't have any complaints about the concept of the film. A drunk girl isn't necessarily the person I want to see in this much depth though.
      8beejer311

      Carol Morley rocks

      i studied under carol morley for a semester, and she is one of the most interesting people i ever met. her documentary, the alcohol years, is an exceptional documentary. Her style inspired me, as a film student, to switch from fiction and pursue documentary filmmaking. A documentary can be about yourself, and at the same time be interesting and not look like your full of yourself. The Alcohol Years is as funny as it is touching. A definite must-see.
      2dbborroughs

      Why are we being asked to watch this? I don't know since its an hour you will never get back

      This is the story of Carol Morley's wild and wanton years back in the 1980's. The film is a series of talking heads of the people Carol slept and partied with back on the 1980's while she was in a band inter-cut with old film footage and new film footage. Carol doesn't appear on film and the film is structured as if the interviewees are talking to Carol and the inter-cut footage is memory.

      I think.

      Then again I really don't care. There is only so much that I can hear about some one's sex life over and over again before I stop caring. Usually about two minutes, this is 50 odd minutes more than that. Actually to be honest the problem is not that I don't want to hear about her sex life, I would, if it was interesting, but its not, its the same basic tale repeated over and over again. There is talk about Carol's partying but mostly people seem to focus on the sex, or so it seemed to me.

      I watched this hoping that I would find something to latch onto, but I couldn't. I don't know why this would interest anyone other that the director who may or may not have made this in an effort to remember how many people she actually slept with. I have no idea what sort of hubris would make someone think that anyone other than those involved with her would want to see this film.

      2 out of 10 for the five minutes that the film is interesting.
      6tomthub

      an interesting, if narcissistic, examination of identity

      an interesting, if narcissistic, examination of identity. Carol Morley - sister of journalist and TV pundit Paul Morley - returns to her teenage stomping ground in Manchester, putting an advert in the local paper for people who remember her. And so we're greeted with a series of talking heads, some famous (Tony Wilson, Vini Reilly) but most unknown. They paint a picture of the years that the documentary maker lost to alcohol and sex. In fact, although she was an artist and in a band, most of the interviewees seem to remember her for her sexual exploits. We never get more than a glimpse of Morley herself but, as the cast of friends and acquaintances talk into the camera, we're forced to become her. It's often intensely personal and uncomfortable, and sometime voyeuristic to the point that you wonder about Morley's motives. But it's nonetheless an interesting glimpse of Manchester at a time when the Hacienda was empty and the Happy Mondays were still practicing in a garage.
      10polly-29

      Well worth seeing

      A more realistic precursor to Michael Winterbottom's '24 Hour Party People', this is a compelling, funny, and poignant memoir of Carol Morley's 'lost' years in Manchester in the early 1980's. The story is told through painfully honest interviews with old friends and acquaintances who reveal that the younger Morley was a wild and promiscuous character. Morley herself never appears on screen, a clever device as the viewer is left to piece her story and her character together (although it's also worth watching the DVD as the director's commentary gives Morley a chance to answer back to some of the comments made about her). A beautifully told insight into a fascinating life, time, city and culture.

      Related interests

      Dziga Vertov in L'Homme à la caméra (1929)
      Documentary

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        (Millions of People) No One Like You
        Written and Performed by Pete Shelley

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • November 9, 2000 (Germany)
      • Country of origin
        • United Kingdom
      • Language
        • English
      • Production companies
        • Cannon and Morley Productions
        • Arts Council of England
        • London Production Fund
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        • 50m

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