Neil, left naked on a Scottish island, embarks on a chaotic road trip to London for his wedding. He faces numerous challenges along the way, unsure if the ceremony will actually take place.Neil, left naked on a Scottish island, embarks on a chaotic road trip to London for his wedding. He faces numerous challenges along the way, unsure if the ceremony will actually take place.Neil, left naked on a Scottish island, embarks on a chaotic road trip to London for his wedding. He faces numerous challenges along the way, unsure if the ceremony will actually take place.
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Michèle Winstanley
- Tina
- (as Michele Winstanley)
- Director
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Featured reviews
Strangely Enjoyable Comedy
This movie isn't half bad! It has a great cast including Martin Clunes, Michael Praed and Griff Rhys-Jones (!) There are plenty of funny scenes in this movie although at times they tend to clash with the more serious issues like death etc. Overall I think this is a top British film that has a lot going for it. There were some very funny moments throughout and if you're a fan of any of these actors, it's pretty doubtless that you'll enjoy this. 8/10
Comedy with 'deeps'
Definitely an under-rated comedy. But I also wonder if there's more going on than comedy? The whole structure - Neil's journey home with trials, tribulations and odd characters detaining him, ending with the confrontation with a rival suitor, seemed to allude strongly to the Odyssey. There were strange elements too: why the final flashback to the police station, with the pan back in 'tunnel vision' style from the dark fading scene, before we see another, unknown, man finding himself naked in Scotland (and presumably beginning a similar journey)? And there was the constant allusion to death: the old woman rowing Neil to the mainland; Carmen's speech about death being the natural state of things; Neil's confrontation with the gunman; and the autopsy dream sequence. I kept thinking of "Jacob's Ladder" (whose hero, like Neil, spent the film nursing a painful injury, had a hallucinatory sequence of being vivisected while denying he was dead, and ended up embracing death). Are the events in "Staggered" Neil's near-death fabulation?
One of the best British films of the 90's
This often overlooked gem from Martin Clunes is one of my favorite films of all time. The typical British comedy style is on show, with ecentric characters (bondage parties by Welsh door-to-door sales men) and a central character who you do geniunely feel sympathetic for in his fight to get to his wedding on time. However the highlight of the film is the beautiful Anna Chancellor as Carman, the goth pathologist who Gary picks up on his travels. With a perfect ending and tale of the underdog its defiantly worth renting or catching on TV.
Ruddy great movie, hard to find too
I saw this several times when it first came out and shortly afterwards on DVD (rental), then couldn't find it on DVD for years to rent or to buy. I have just purchased my first DVD for over ten years simply to own this classic film again. They don't make them like this any more, unfortunately. This movie is one of the very few out there that you can't find anywhere online, on the yohoho sites for example. I can't think why that is because there are many thousands of movies out there that i would definitely consider to be utter drek compared to this movie. Twilight and High school musical are prime examples, i had the misfortune to have these thrust upon me when spending time with an ex-girlfriend's kids - i wish i could remove the damaged portion of my brain that was exposed to that drivel. Anyway, Staggered is awesome.
Excellent Extension of Men Behaving Badly
This film is a very well made extension of the type of comedy seen in the TV series Men Behaving Badly, albeit with a much better romance.
Martin Clunes does a fine job directing and acting. Why he's never done more directing is a mystery. Anna Chancellor is also great. Sadly Michael Praed demonstrates the talents that have kept him off the TV for the best part of a decade - he's as stiff as a tailor's dummy.
The film is very funny with an adequate (though not brilliant) plot to hold together the increasingly bizarre episodes that happen to Neil as he finds his way back through the weirdness of modern Britain.
Recommended to anyone who likes adult comedy and who wants a different level of entertainment than American Pie and its like.
Martin Clunes does a fine job directing and acting. Why he's never done more directing is a mystery. Anna Chancellor is also great. Sadly Michael Praed demonstrates the talents that have kept him off the TV for the best part of a decade - he's as stiff as a tailor's dummy.
The film is very funny with an adequate (though not brilliant) plot to hold together the increasingly bizarre episodes that happen to Neil as he finds his way back through the weirdness of modern Britain.
Recommended to anyone who likes adult comedy and who wants a different level of entertainment than American Pie and its like.
Did you know
- TriviaFinal film of David Kossoff.
- GoofsThe police officer states that Neil stole Carmen's car on "the coldest night of the year". If this film is indeed set over the coldest period of any year, there is no way Neil could have survived being left naked on a beach on an island in the north of Scotland the previous night. He would have quickly got hypothermia. He even goes into the sea more than once and suffers no ill effects.
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Game (1997)
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