Four British buddies agree to arrange a home-alone party as the ultimate solution to their problems with the opposite sex.Four British buddies agree to arrange a home-alone party as the ultimate solution to their problems with the opposite sex.Four British buddies agree to arrange a home-alone party as the ultimate solution to their problems with the opposite sex.
Photos
Sarah Canon
- Neil's Mum
- (as Sarah Cannon)
Anna Magdelena
- Alicia
- (as Anna Magdalena)
Zoe Harrison
- Kirstie
- (as Zoë Harrison)
Andy McQuade
- Pizza Chef
- (as Andy Mcquade)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPremiered at Edinburgh Film Festival in 2004 - shortly before this low budget English teen-movie was discovered by an American distribution company.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Starz Inside: In the Gutter (2008)
Featured review
A great fun film to watch with your mates
A British teen-movie that shows an English take on "American Pie"? Surely not, but yes, this film from a talented team of young filmmakers has achieved it.
With all the gloss that usually marks a Hollywood movie, this film brings back many of my memories of growing up in small-town England, the anxieties of meeting (or not meeting!) girls. It cleverly captures the tensions of growing up in a small market town, where there are limited opportunities to meet new people, and yet you are reluctant to become involved with people you went to school with. Although Neil's Party has an underlying poignancy, it is very funny, with some excellent one-liners, and a number of ribald situations that had me rolling in the aisles.
And of course, no teen movie is complete without some sex; Neil's Party has plenty of sexy situations, with some beautiful girls. The focus of Neil's adoration, and his fantasies, is the beautiful Lauren (played by Lauren Bigby definitely a girl to watch for the future). The movie gains considerably from using a cast of young up-and-coming actors, who bring a freshness to the picture by virtue of being new and unknown faces surely they will not remain unknown for long.
For viewers who have not been to England, this movie will show the Brits and middle England in a new light; for Brits abroad, it will conjure up those anxious, carefree days when the sun always shone, and the main worry was how to get laid.
This is not an art-house movie; it's young, fresh and great fun; see it.
With all the gloss that usually marks a Hollywood movie, this film brings back many of my memories of growing up in small-town England, the anxieties of meeting (or not meeting!) girls. It cleverly captures the tensions of growing up in a small market town, where there are limited opportunities to meet new people, and yet you are reluctant to become involved with people you went to school with. Although Neil's Party has an underlying poignancy, it is very funny, with some excellent one-liners, and a number of ribald situations that had me rolling in the aisles.
And of course, no teen movie is complete without some sex; Neil's Party has plenty of sexy situations, with some beautiful girls. The focus of Neil's adoration, and his fantasies, is the beautiful Lauren (played by Lauren Bigby definitely a girl to watch for the future). The movie gains considerably from using a cast of young up-and-coming actors, who bring a freshness to the picture by virtue of being new and unknown faces surely they will not remain unknown for long.
For viewers who have not been to England, this movie will show the Brits and middle England in a new light; for Brits abroad, it will conjure up those anxious, carefree days when the sun always shone, and the main worry was how to get laid.
This is not an art-house movie; it's young, fresh and great fun; see it.
helpful•12
- rossensign
- Sep 13, 2006
Details
Box office
- Budget
- £1,100,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content