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IMDbPro

Pride

  • 2014
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
64K
YOUR RATING
Imelda Staunton, Paddy Considine, Bill Nighy, Andrew Scott, Dominic West, George MacKay, Ben Schnetzer, and Faye Marsay in Pride (2014)
UK gay and lesbian activists work to help miners during their lengthy strike of the National Union of Mineworkers in the summer of 1984.
Play trailer2:30
56 Videos
55 Photos
Romantic ComedyBiographyComedyDramaHistoryRomance

U.K. gay activists work to help miners during their lengthy strike of the National Union of Mineworkers in the summer of 1984.U.K. gay activists work to help miners during their lengthy strike of the National Union of Mineworkers in the summer of 1984.U.K. gay activists work to help miners during their lengthy strike of the National Union of Mineworkers in the summer of 1984.

  • Director
    • Matthew Warchus
  • Writer
    • Stephen Beresford
  • Stars
    • Bill Nighy
    • Imelda Staunton
    • Dominic West
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    64K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Matthew Warchus
    • Writer
      • Stephen Beresford
    • Stars
      • Bill Nighy
      • Imelda Staunton
      • Dominic West
    • 204User reviews
    • 187Critic reviews
    • 79Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 10 wins & 25 nominations total

    Videos56

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    Trailer 2:30
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    U.S. Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:30
    U.S. Theatrical Trailer
    U.S. Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:30
    U.S. Theatrical Trailer
    Clip
    Clip 0:40
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    Photos55

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Bill Nighy
    Bill Nighy
    • Cliff
    Imelda Staunton
    Imelda Staunton
    • Hefina
    Dominic West
    Dominic West
    • Jonathan
    Paddy Considine
    Paddy Considine
    • Dai Donovan
    Ben Schnetzer
    Ben Schnetzer
    • Mark Ashton
    Abram Rooney
    • Young Guy
    Jim McManus
    • Old Man
    George MacKay
    George MacKay
    • Joe Cooper
    Monica Dolan
    Monica Dolan
    • Marion Cooper
    Matthew Flynn
    Matthew Flynn
    • Tony Cooper
    Andrew Scott
    Andrew Scott
    • Gethin Roberts
    Joe Gilgun
    Joe Gilgun
    • Mike Jackson
    Faye Marsay
    Faye Marsay
    • Steph Chambers
    Freddie Fox
    Freddie Fox
    • Jeff Cole
    Lucy Timmons
    • Woman with Little Girl
    Jordan Metcalfe
    Jordan Metcalfe
    • Charlie
    Roger Morlidge
    Roger Morlidge
    • Wardrobe Master
    Dean Ashton
    Dean Ashton
    • Young Man
    • Director
      • Matthew Warchus
    • Writer
      • Stephen Beresford
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews204

    7.864K
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    Featured reviews

    7greatbritain1989

    Incredible effort, but oh does it hit so hard

    I saw this yesterday at a preview and was particularly impressed by the amazing production values shown in this film, as well as the powerful warmth of the ensemble cast within this. Many stand out, to the point where everyone stands out. My personal favourite performances are probably Dominic West's because of his wonderful energy, fantastic delivery and that the fact that he was playing a gay men (and was significantly less creepy than his Fred West performance) and Jessica Gunning's who played her play with such warmth and fire. That said, Staunton, Nighty and Schnetzer et all had some determination as well, it really is that not to want to give individual props to all.

    British humour tends to be our best selling point and this film lays bare just how raw and witty we can be in our dialogue when handling such powerful drama. That said, the film is a very difficult viewing experience, in my eyes. The Miners Strike alone is a very raw and sad event for all to see, especially when there will be absolutely no surprises as to the outcome. On top of this there is a plethora of tragic LGBT issues that further hit the viewer like a fist throughout, be it a family not accepting their gay son, the Miners' refusal to fully support the LBGT community when the going gets tougher (the bleakness of those scenes are particularly devastating), the start of AIDS and the knowledge that these men's lives will never be the same, the occasional violence shown to the gay men… the list really does go on. The fact that there is a strong undercurrent of humour throughout is particularly needed and welcomed, although towards the end it proves hard to laugh at. Many look back to the 80s with total joy, but for many people, they were uncertain, intensely painful years to survive in. This movie is a tribute to them, and the cast and crew provide their joie de vivre with an open, pulsating heart.

    Watch this preparing to feel a wide variety of emotions. Not all settling.
    10ste-scouse

    Brilliant moving and accurate I know I was there.

    I have just watched this film and on a personal level it affected me greatly. I was a young gay man in 1984 and I and friends, travelled to both the 84 and 85 Pride marches in London. I remember the Miners support at the 85 and we were greatly touched at the time. The movie got the details exactly right, I and many of my gay friends were on lots of marches including the ones against Clause 28 the evil Tory piece of legislation that outlawed promotion of homosexuality in schools and publicly funded museums and art gallerias (among others).

    What I want to say about this film is that young gay and straight people should see it. It is immensely moving and funny. Just the right balance. I wept throughout and laughed because it brought to life my youth as I lived it in protest against that evil woman and her kind who dared to tell us how to live our lives, and who we couldn't legally love. It was scary times, AIDS, homophobia and arrest for protest.

    I probably can't be objective because of my involvement as a youth in gay protest, it brought raw emotions to recall how angry we young people were then. But more importantly for me it reminded me like it was only yesterday of the immense Pride we felt at fighting for our rights and anyone who was a victim of hatred and prejudice.

    All of the actors were a delight, and the portrayal of working class solidarity spot on and very emotional. I loved the fact that it had that British humour that is so peculiar to this country. The details were very true to the time, I recognised the clothes, the music and how tatty gay clubs were with peeling paint on the walls. It is a film that brings to life a time that has not been portrayed before, of protest, solidarity and how together we can change things.

    I'm glad that such a film can be made and successful in this country now as a mainstream film as well. Maybe that shows that the protest of our youth changed things. I can get married now if I wish and thanks to a Tory PM, who'd have thought it? So one big thank you to all involved for making this 50 something gay man remember so vividly, and in spite of the dark days portrayed, our youthful struggle and reminding us that we really did something wonderful and change things, as this film is proof positive that we did just by the fact that is got made.

    I hope that young gay people, who still cope with the same problems we did, isolated, alone, and scared can watch this film and gain strength from it and join the fight against prejudice still to be won.
    9n-j-terry-250-33041

    Superb... but then I'm biased.

    A fabulously rich movie with a superb mix of talent relating the victories of human relationships over and above the overwhelming power of political ideology in partnership with business.

    Bill Nighy plays a beautifully understated, quiet and thoughtful role in contrast to the ebullient Imelda Staunton, matriarchal doyenne of the small Welsh mining town that is the focus for solidarity expressed by LGSM. Paddy Considine as Dai is the somewhat unwitting emissary who meets with the group in London and speaks powerfully and clearly to the community there and to the rather more conservative community in his home town as to the nature of solidarity. Much humour is placed in the two cultures coming together and throughout there are themes of coming out, for both communities; the subtle and insidious nature of discrimination, the hegemonic control it exerts when backed by powerful media presentation, the opportunism of the bitter and resentful, and the damage that is wrought upon families and communities when work is alienated from the individuals identity. Jessie Cave, Ben Schnetzer, Sophie Evans, George Mackay and Freddie Fox all perform keenly and will have done their rising stars no harm here. Not sure how this film will travel internationally, a bit parochial, but then I thought the same about Billy Elliott and that seems to have done OK.

    Culturally the film is a trip down memory lane, the music, the politics, the clothing and decor all take me back to 1984, the year of my eighteenth birthday, when my father was one of those striking miners, my mother and the other mothers ran the kitchen in the local church hall. Hence my bias, there is much in this film that is intensely personal.but even if this were not the case, I would still recommend the artistry of this movie and it's passion to anyone.
    8gsygsy

    Life-enhancing

    PRIDE commemorates the hitherto unremarked but nevertheless remarkable alliance between Welsh miners and London lesbians and gay men. It is an enjoyable, well-made, sometimes uplifting, movie set in a bleak period of British history. It is a political film, in the best sense: it's about people joining together to take control of their own destinies, a theme which has a long history in UK cinema, going back at least to the fantasy of PASSPORT TO PIMLICO (1949) to the based-on-fact MADE IN DAGENHAM (2010).

    It is well-scripted, beautifully directed, skillfully and enjoyably acted. I have one niggle. Not so much with this film in particular, but rather with all those setting out to please a mass-audience whilst also trying to deal with serious issues. The times in which PRIDE is set were very dark, but I don't know that a mainstream movie can make it clear for those that weren't there just how dark they were. The film goes some way to showing it, but it can't really plumb the depths because - well, mainstream movies can't and still stay in the mainstream. It's a dilemma that affects many Hollywood comedies set in the Great Depression, even those, like MY MAN GODFREY (1936) for example, that were made at the time.

    Still, PRIDE manages by and large to transcend such difficulties. It is a life-enhancing piece of cinema, which could and should reach a wide audience.
    rogerdarlington

    Solidarity forever!

    In the summer of 2014, my wife and I went to a north London dinner party where one of the other guests was Mike Jackson, a leading member of Lesbians and Guys Support the Miners ((LGSM), a support group during the bitter industrial dispute of 1984-85 which provided money and assistance to a mining community in South Wales. He told us how he had been acting as a principal adviser to writer Stephen Beresford and director Matthew Warchus who had crafted the forthcoming film "Pride" which explored this unlikely pairing of groups fighting the iniquities of Thatcher's Britain and he made clear his delight at how the subject had been treated for the big screen.

    So, the first weekend that the movie was on show, four of us from that dinner party were in the cinema to view it and we were all thrilled with how brilliantly this story has been told. Some of us even cried.

    The film is unashamedly political, both in its representation of the prejudice against homosexuals at a time was AIDS was devastating the gay community and the hostility of ministers, media and police to the miners' fight to keep pits open, but the treatment ensures that this is an immensely entertaining and often very funny work. Although the movie wears its political heart on its sleeve, it avoids an over-simplistic portrayal of the gay cause by showing entrenched opposition to their involvement in the miners dispute from sections of the Welsh community and challenge from gays themselves as to why they should be involved in a workers' strike, although the controversy of the lack of a ballot authorising the strike itself is avoided.

    The script is a triumph with every line making an impact and telling us something and there are some wonderful jokes. A disco dancing scene and a solo-to-group singing session are destined to become favourite recollections of a memorable movie. The cast is magical: a combination of distinguished character actors like Imelda Staunton, Dominic West and Bill Nighy (although his South Wales accent is wobbly) and young newcomers like Ben Schnetzer, Joseph Gilgun and George MacKay. And there is remarkable attention to period detail (we had the same design of coffee cup as in an early scene), enhanced by music from the time.

    Although GLSM was eventually shunned by the official strike committee and the miners lost the strike and almost all of Britain's pits have subsequently closed, the concluding scenes of the film and the final bits of informative text turn this historic interaction into a success that should inspire the present day gay community and labour movement alike. As Mike Jackson put it in an article about the film: "The one thing the ruling class don't want is solidarity; they don't want us to join the dots up."

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The song 'For a Friend', which is heard playing over the end credits, was actually written for the real Mark Ashton. It was written and performed by The Communards, whose members Jimmy Somerville and Richard Coles were both friends of Mark.
    • Goofs
      In a scene set in 1984, Joe and his family are seen watching the government TV advert "AIDS: Don't die of ignorance". The slogan was first used in November 1986 and the advert was first shown in January 1987.
    • Quotes

      [Giving a Speech in a Gay Bar]

      Dai: I've had a lot of new experiences during this strike. Speaking in public, standing on a picket line, And now I'm in a gay bar.

      Jonathan: Well, if you don't like it, you can go home.

      Dai: As a matter of fact, I do like it.

      [Crowd Ooh's]

      Dai: Beer's a bit expensive, mind.

      [Crowd Laughs]

      Dai: But, really, there's only one difference between this and a bar in South Wales. The women. They're a lot more feminine in here.

      [the Crowd Laughs and Cheers]

      Dai: What I'd really like to say to you tonight is thank you. If you're one of the people that's put money in these buckets, if you've supported LGSM, then thank you, because what you've given us is more than money. It's friendship. When you're in a battle against an enemy so much bigger, so much stronger than you, well, to find out you had a friend you never knew existed, well, that's the best feeling in the world. So, thank you.

      [the Crowd Applauds and Cheers Dai and LGSM]

    • Crazy credits
      The title is shown, one letter at a time, as a key character walks in front of a brick wall.
    • Connections
      Featured in Projector: Pride (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      Shame Shame Shame
      Written by Sylvia Robinson

      Performed by Shirley and Company

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Pride?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 17, 2014 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • France
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • BBC Films (United Kingdom)
      • Calamity Films (United Kingdom)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Welsh
    • Also known as
      • Pride: orgullo y esperanza
    • Filming locations
      • Onllwyn, Powys, Wales(they filmed in the town they helped)
    • Production companies
      • Pathe UK
      • Pathé
      • CBS Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,446,634
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $100,040
      • Sep 28, 2014
    • Gross worldwide
      • $19,014,619
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 59m(119 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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