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SoulBoy

  • 2010
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
SoulBoy (2010)
A coming-of-age drama set in the 1970s Northern Soul underground music scene.
Play trailer2:05
1 Video
4 Photos
ComedyDramaMusic

A coming-of-age drama set in the 1970s Northern Soul underground music scene.A coming-of-age drama set in the 1970s Northern Soul underground music scene.A coming-of-age drama set in the 1970s Northern Soul underground music scene.

  • Director
    • Shimmy Marcus
  • Writers
    • Mark Doherty
    • Jeff Williams
  • Stars
    • Alfie Allen
    • Martin Compston
    • Hannah Crighton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Shimmy Marcus
    • Writers
      • Mark Doherty
      • Jeff Williams
    • Stars
      • Alfie Allen
      • Martin Compston
      • Hannah Crighton
    • 12User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Trailer

    Photos3

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    Top cast41

    Edit
    Alfie Allen
    Alfie Allen
    • Russ Mountjoy
    Martin Compston
    Martin Compston
    • Joe McCain
    Hannah Crighton
    • Purple Onion Lass
    Brian McCardie
    Brian McCardie
    • Fish Shop Bobby
    Jo Hartley
    Jo Hartley
    • Monica
    Pat Shortt
    Pat Shortt
    • Brendan
    Nichola Burley
    Nichola Burley
    • Jane Rogers
    Huey Morgan
    Huey Morgan
    • Dee Dee
    Danielle Henry
    Danielle Henry
    • Chrissie
    Craig Parkinson
    Craig Parkinson
    • Alan
    Brennan Reece
    • Dexie
    Felicity Jones
    Felicity Jones
    • Mandy Hodgson
    Bruce Jones
    Bruce Jones
    • Mike the Manager
    Vortre Williams
    • Derek
    • (as Trevor Williams)
    Honra Shirley
    • Mrs. Woods
    Mark Richardson
    • Bouncer
    Liam Quinn
    • Tommy
    Matthew Hill
    • Record Dealer
    • Director
      • Shimmy Marcus
    • Writers
      • Mark Doherty
      • Jeff Williams
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    5.91.2K
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    Featured reviews

    5Prismark10

    You have soul

    There are a lot of white blues musicians heavily influenced by black blues legends and yet ironically display racists views. Cough, Eric Clapton for example although he claims he was drunk at the time.

    In the same vein, Wigan is one of the most racists town in Britain. I went there once with an Asian friend and it was eye popping the blatant racism on display and the people of Wigan seemed to be rather proud of this. Then again what do you expect when the town's rugby supporters would throw bananas on the pitch for one of their own highly paid black rugby players.

    This kind of prejudice is always conveniently overlooked when programme makers examine the history of the Wigan Casino. Still the Wigan Casino has attained legendary status as the dance mecca for 1960s American soul music, daring dance moves and later on giving a new lease of life to the soul legends of yesteryear.

    SoulBoy gives a slice of life in the 1970s when a young lad, Joe (Martin Compston) from Stoke discovers the joys of Soul music, dancing, Wigan Casino, getting girls and popping pills. He falls for a blonde but its a brunette who is his true soul mate. Along the way he crosses swords with a nasty ace dancer who is the boyfriend of the blonde one and Joe's fellow work mate has a thing for the wife from the local chip shop whose husband is the jealous and violent type.

    There are several cast members who have ended up later in the BBC TV series Line of Duty, so you have here a few familiar faces if you watch Line of Duty.

    SoulBoy is a low budget movie, filmed in Stoke. It has a slight storyline but there is a lot of heart in the acting. It does try to be a Staffordshire version of Saturday Night Fever although the final dance off does look a little weak.

    The film did miss a nice humorous twist where it should have had a present day scene when all the now aged dancers from the Wigan Casino days are lining up at the local hospitals waiting for their hip and knee replacement surgery!
    7l_rawjalaurence

    Energetic Coming-of-Age Drama That Almost Gets the Period Atmosphere Right

    The basic scenario of SOULBOY is a familiar one: boy Joe (Martin Compston) meets unattainable girl (Nichola Burley) and follows her up to a club in Wigan that functions as the center of Northern Soul. There he learns how to dance, but while doing so he gradually discovers that plain lass Mandy (Felicity Jones) has fallen in love with him. After Mandy takes an overdose, Joe realizes his true feelings. Back in the club he has an energetic dance-off with smarmy Alan (Craig Parkinson), and emerges triumphant, thereafter to enjoy love with Mandy.

    The grimy, down-at-heel atmosphere of mid-Seventies Stoke-on-Trent is admirably evoked by director Shimmy Marcus, from the poky two-up, two-down houses to the local pub, where everyone pours pints down without ever seeming to enjoy themselves. Joe's mate Russ (Alfie Allen) has a grotesque dance that he calls the "dying fly," but he can only perform that when he is drunk. Sometimes Marcus overdoes the Seventies aura, such as having politician Enoch Powell speaking on one of the car radios; by 1974 he was virtually a spent force in politics, having resigned from the Conservative Party and joined the Ulster Unionists. Some of the cars seem a little antiquated too, dating from a decade earlier.

    Once the action shifts to the club, however, the mise-en-scene changes abruptly. Vladimir Trivic's camera admirably captures the phantasmagoria of color, light, bodily movements, sweat and unadulterated fun that characterized the late-night gigs at the club, whose patrons came from all over the country each Saturday night by coach to enjoy the fun. For those of us with longer memories, the set pieces have strong echoes of Saturday NIGHT FEVER (1977) with Joe in the John Travolta role, but that resemblance does not detract from the exuberant staging, in which music and dance combine to create a series of stirring sequences. The final dance-off between Joe and Alan is something to behold: director Marcus uses slow-motion and frequent close-ups to make us aware of the sheer effort involved by the protagonists.

    The film ends with a series of of short interviews from people - now very much middle-aged - that frequented the club when it was in its heyday during the mid-Seventies. Their reminiscences capture the atmosphere of excitement and daring that was characteristic of the club; no wonder it was named "best disco in the world" later on in the decade, despite its assuming location in a Lancashire industrial town.
    6pomeroy-nick

    Despite all of the problems with this film, it is enjoyable. If you enjoy Northern Soul then this film will get you yearning for the Casino Club.

    Northern Soul is back, it's being pumped into bars and clubs with rising regularity. Understandably with every resurrected craze, it had been converted into a film last year. The story is bland at best, with a predictable and formulaic path. The saving grace is a good performance by Martin Compston and the great soundtrack.

    Soulboy is branded as a comedy drama, the comedy it speaks of is provided by various cheap jokes throughout, nothing showing real wit or craftsmanship. Cringe worthy dialogue and scenes abound with fairly wooden character acting providing the backdrop for see through storytelling.

    Joe, as the likely lad, gets mixed up in drugs and the plot takes a dark turn. As it's a light hearted drama, no real harm comes of the actions. I don't want to bash the director and producers of the film as it is brilliantly shot, the dance scenes are a real treat to watch (except for the painful dance off) and everything is set up perfectly for the 70's from the platforms to the flares and the god awful red tank top. Regarding the dance off, maybe I'm wrong, but it seems to me that in Wigan in the 70's it would've been a fight not a dance. The film didn't need that scene but obviously someone had the bright idea of a big Hollywood style ending. This isn't what the audience wanted from a Northern Soul tribute.

    Despite all of the problems with this film, it is enjoyable, mainly because of the music, some of which I've now added to my collection. If you enjoy Northern Soul then this film will get you yearning for the Casino Club, if you don't then there isn't a great deal else to draw you in as the script and predictability make it a no brainer of a watch. Without the music, this is a poor man's An Education.
    6rashhuman

    Not bad.

    Look, I get the reviews. It's not great, the plot is wafer-thin, but the music is great and I can understand the constraints of the budget and actually think that the production design was well done.

    However, the only major criticism of this film is the seemingly-short distance it apparently takes to get from Stoke to Wigan! Do you know how long that would take? Even today you're talking heading north for an hour, in a fast car, up the M6.

    And as a Stoke native, Martin didn't do too bad with the accent, and he's Scottish. But as for the others, I see that the 'generic Northern' comes out again, when the Stoke accent is far more nuanced and difficult for an outsider. There's definite Derby/Nottingham twang in there, and maybe a bit of a Scouse. Toby Jones gave it a good go in Marvellous.

    Anyway, worth a watch. Plenty of future stars in there.
    5r96sk

    Isn't a worthwhile watch

    Despite a decent cast, 'SoulBoy' isn't a worthwhile watch.

    It portrays a story that I feel like I've seen many times before, with much of it being quite predictable - even taking that element out, it's kinda cringey to watch unfold. Initially, it feels like a cheap attempt at replicating 'Kevin & Perry Go Large' and/or 'The Inbetweeners', though does in fairness deviate from that eventually. The 70s look, meanwhile, does come out well at least.

    As for the onscreen talent, a pre-'Line of Duty' Martin Compston plays lead ahead of Craig Parkinson, who he'd heavily work with to much greater effect on that aforementioned television show, Felicity Jones, Alfie Allen and Nichola Burley. Bruce Jones, known in the UK for 'Coronation Street', is in there too. It's a shame that I didn't like this 2010 flick, as that's a solid cast list for this sorta film.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Near the beginning, in the record shop when the man asks if "this" is a record by Kim Weston, he is actually holding Tales From Topographic Oceans by Yes.
    • Goofs
      About an hour into the film, Alfie Allen orders a drink in the pub by saying "can I get a bottle please?".

      "Can I get..." is an Americanism that has only crept into the UK some time in the last 10 years and definitely would never have been used in the 70s.
    • Quotes

      Mandy Hodgson: Art college Joe, I've been accepted - and you're not going to stop me.

      Joe McCain: Why would I stop you? I think you're amazing, like that guy mattress.

      Mandy Hodgson: Matisse.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Wright Stuff: Episode #13.46 (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Tiger Feet
      Written by Nicky Chinn (uncredited) and Mike Chapman (uncredited)

      Performed by Mud

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 3, 2010 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Souled Out
    • Filming locations
      • Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Ipso Facto Films
      • Dreamfinder Productions
      • Screen West Midlands
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • £1,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 22m(82 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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