IMDb RATING
5.6/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
In London in 1958, a young photographer seeks media stardom to keep the love of a beautiful, aspiring fashion designer.In London in 1958, a young photographer seeks media stardom to keep the love of a beautiful, aspiring fashion designer.In London in 1958, a young photographer seeks media stardom to keep the love of a beautiful, aspiring fashion designer.
Joseph McKenna
- Fabulous Hoplite
- (as Joe McKenna)
Edward Tudor-Pole
- Ed the Ted
- (as Tenpole Tudor)
5.63.9K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
A great journey through London
A fun musical with a lot of energy and great acting, 'Absolute Beginners' will win a place in your heart. This is the sharpest I've seen Bowie in a film, and Patsy Kensit was beautiful as Suzette. A political piece as well as a time piece, Temple captured the feel of a Broadway or West End musical perfectly. A great turnaround for Temple, who really had me worried after directing 'Mantrap'. It is a musical, so liberties have to be allowed, but for fans of the musical this is a great one to check out. Rating: 27/40
Exhilarating Adrenalin Rush
What a Corker of a movie which moves at a lightning pace of youth in the 1950's based on the youth culture book by Colin McInnes. We see the birth of the teenager in Britain wiping away the grey cobwebs of post war Britain and revitalising it with a kaleidoscope of colour. Eddie O'Donnell is the spunky immaculately dressed hedonist who wants to dance and carouse the night away in Swinging London and Patsy Kensit's film debut is superb as Colin'ns(O'Donnel's) sex kitten who's a real temptress. The music score is excellent which interwines with the plot very well and some of London's well known honey pots are featured, like The Wag Club which is sadly no more. Ray Davies actually appears in the film, as does David Bowie and Sade.Not forgetting the great songs by The Style Council and Smiley Culture with an underlying jazz groove by Gil Evans. The Introduction to this movie is one of the best ever and features a cast of thousands. Congratulations Julian Temple on this aesthetic musical delight.
I like this one!
First, I must respectfully disagree with the other reviewer who hated this movie. It has a complex set of plot lines that deal with a number of issues revolving around the lives of a young up-and-coming "pop photographer", and his love interest -- played by Patsy Kensit. Then, there is the "old queen" (also an unscrupulous real estate developer) who marries Patsy. Now, add to that the ad agency aspect (David Bowie's song and dance routine to "Selling Out" is a classic), plus the racial tensions in 1950's or 1960's London, and you have a multi-layered plot tapestry.
Personally, I don't mind that David Bowie is only in the movie for ten minutes -- I am a fan of Bowie, but this is really not "his movie".
Personally, I don't mind that David Bowie is only in the movie for ten minutes -- I am a fan of Bowie, but this is really not "his movie".
uneven British musical flop
In 1958, aspiring photographer Colin is photographing the hip London scene. He loves model Crepe Suzette (Patsy Kensit) who is only interested in gaining fame. She crashes the catwalk of old style fashion designer Henley of Mayfair (James Fox) who is forced to appropriate her wild antics as his own creation. Colin befriends society king Vendice Partners (David Bowie).
The lead has no charisma. He needs some boyish charms. Without it, the movie struggles with a hole at its center. His character doesn't even like the world in his pictures and the audience returns the favor. He has a big overturning-the-tables turn and the movie tries to sell it as rebelling against the establishment. The problem is that I don't think he likes the alternative either. His character doesn't seem to like anything. He's a grumpy teenager. I waited a long time for David Bowie to show up but even his star power cannot save this. Quite frankly, this should be his movie, not the kid. He's the most interesting performer. Kensit is fine but she's just an object. The production is uneven with some stagey production while other parts are fake realism. It's both too glossy and too grimy at the same time. I don't mind the fake stage reality but it's an awkward mix. As a musical, it does have one great David Bowie song but otherwise, it is uneven as the actors do their own singing. Sade is a nightclub singer and that's fun. It's an uneven mix. The subject matter also gets uneven while dealing with some serious racial matters as well as fake fame issues. Other successful musicals have done the mix much better but this one struggles. This is a British flop. I don't know much about it. It came and went without much notice across the pond. At least, it's an interesting flop.
The lead has no charisma. He needs some boyish charms. Without it, the movie struggles with a hole at its center. His character doesn't even like the world in his pictures and the audience returns the favor. He has a big overturning-the-tables turn and the movie tries to sell it as rebelling against the establishment. The problem is that I don't think he likes the alternative either. His character doesn't seem to like anything. He's a grumpy teenager. I waited a long time for David Bowie to show up but even his star power cannot save this. Quite frankly, this should be his movie, not the kid. He's the most interesting performer. Kensit is fine but she's just an object. The production is uneven with some stagey production while other parts are fake realism. It's both too glossy and too grimy at the same time. I don't mind the fake stage reality but it's an awkward mix. As a musical, it does have one great David Bowie song but otherwise, it is uneven as the actors do their own singing. Sade is a nightclub singer and that's fun. It's an uneven mix. The subject matter also gets uneven while dealing with some serious racial matters as well as fake fame issues. Other successful musicals have done the mix much better but this one struggles. This is a British flop. I don't know much about it. It came and went without much notice across the pond. At least, it's an interesting flop.
Curious Slice of Time
The main attraction here is the score, which features the title song and "That's Motivation," performed and composed by rock icon David Bowie, as well as his version of the classic "Volare." In addition, you get "Killer Blow" performed by Sade and jazz tunes by Charles Mingus and Miles Davis performed by Gil Evans. This movie makes you believe that is David Bowie had been performing in the 1930s he would have been a sensation then too.
Did you know
- TriviaThe character of "Harry Charms" was based on a real-life British manager and impresario of the period, Larry Parnes, who was famous for hiring unknown singers and giving them extravagant stage names (his most famous client was Billy Fury). In 1960 he hired an unknown Liverpool band called The Beatles to accompany one of his lesser stars, Johnny Gentle, on a tour of Scotland, but he decided not to take the Beatles on as clients because he was only interested in handling solo singers, not groups.
- GoofsDuring the riot scenes, in one shot a double decker bus is on fire. In the next shot, it isn't burning. In the next shot, it is. (During the T.V. announcers speak to the viewing public about the 'race riots').
- ConnectionsEdited into Ray Davies: Quiet Life (1986)
- SoundtracksSanta Lucia
Performed and composed by Ekow Abban
- How long is Absolute Beginners?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Absolute Beginners - The Musical
- Filming locations
- Albert R. Broccoli 007 Stage, Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(Soho Night Street set)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $930,211
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $83,743
- Apr 20, 1986
- Gross worldwide
- $930,211
- Runtime
- 1h 48m(108 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content








