Five men take a booze cruise to France. Nothing goes as planned. Meanwhile, their wives go about their business back in Kent.Five men take a booze cruise to France. Nothing goes as planned. Meanwhile, their wives go about their business back in Kent.Five men take a booze cruise to France. Nothing goes as planned. Meanwhile, their wives go about their business back in Kent.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Elsa Kikoïne
- Juliette
- (as Elsa Kikoine)
Katherine Swift
- Party Goer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.9555
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
Good comedy drama
This was a one-off 2-hour drama on ITV. It is about a group of miss-matched neighbours going on a booze cruise to France. The script was very good with witty dialogue and strong characters. All the acting by the main and even the supporting cast was of the highest order with the veteran Brian Murphy brilliant as the moaning pensioner. It had plenty of laugh out moments and a clever 4-pronged plot. Though there were a couple of predictable moments on the whole it provided a decent level of entertainment. An enjoyable drama, which I recommend you watch.
Lads' Booze Cruise With All The Problems
It's five blokes on their dream escape to France to really stock-up and save a substantial wodge of cash in the process. It's pre-Brexit and at a time when it was very easy to bring back copious amounts of booze for personal consumption only back from the continent.
Of course that's now much more difficult. It's got a lot of slapstick British humour with plenty of quips and mockering. It's classic English humour.
It's not the best-of-scripts but it is done very well and I would not change too much. It's got some pedigree English TV actors lead by the illustrious Martin Clunes.
Literally five blokes on a mission to get their quality booze. Except it doesn't go as planned. There's an affair. There's several disasters. There's plenty of slapstick. It's getting the lads together and an adventure. It's quality British TV and pre-Brexit when life was a lot easier. Great stuff.
Of course that's now much more difficult. It's got a lot of slapstick British humour with plenty of quips and mockering. It's classic English humour.
It's not the best-of-scripts but it is done very well and I would not change too much. It's got some pedigree English TV actors lead by the illustrious Martin Clunes.
Literally five blokes on a mission to get their quality booze. Except it doesn't go as planned. There's an affair. There's several disasters. There's plenty of slapstick. It's getting the lads together and an adventure. It's quality British TV and pre-Brexit when life was a lot easier. Great stuff.
"If I were a rich man"
5 blokes nip to Calais for cheap plonk in the days when it was allegedly cheaper, to buy the stuff in France than in the local supermarket.
This first episode of the trilogy introduces us to a number of family situations and we. Glimpse further edges to the relationships.
There is the happy family man Dave Bolton with his ever loving spouse, the lovely Cath the perfect couple.
There's Dave's best mate and fellow Booze Cruiser Rob along his significant other Leone, and his male proclivities.
Another ingredient is the Rainer family husband Clive his spouse Ruth, and their thoroughly spoilt daughter Chloe.
Any more for the skylark?
Rather there are the pensioners Grace and Maurice, who live somewhat adjacent to Rob and Dave.
Indeed they all reside almost cheek by jowl with one another, though they are separated by more than distance.
These are the main or principal ingredients but its how they stir together, that makes this a great and enjoyable jaunt.
This first episode of the trilogy introduces us to a number of family situations and we. Glimpse further edges to the relationships.
There is the happy family man Dave Bolton with his ever loving spouse, the lovely Cath the perfect couple.
There's Dave's best mate and fellow Booze Cruiser Rob along his significant other Leone, and his male proclivities.
Another ingredient is the Rainer family husband Clive his spouse Ruth, and their thoroughly spoilt daughter Chloe.
Any more for the skylark?
Rather there are the pensioners Grace and Maurice, who live somewhat adjacent to Rob and Dave.
Indeed they all reside almost cheek by jowl with one another, though they are separated by more than distance.
These are the main or principal ingredients but its how they stir together, that makes this a great and enjoyable jaunt.
Great storyline and good acting.
The blokes are a really mixed bag. Back home, the ladies are also across different social backgrounds. Lots of little avenues off the main road here and they all work. Great little scenarios and twists. Not laugh aloud humour but gives you plenty to grin at and like. Just watched it again. Pity that the Clive character (M Clunes), is not in the 2nd and 3rd editions.
A charming delight
I watched this on TV tonight, remembering with vague fondness its original outing in 2003. It was a delight, with an excellent script supported by a first rate cast. Not subtle, but warm, clean and really rather innocent fun. All Whilst the strongest elements were the combative relationship between Brian Murphy and Neil Pearson the sub stories with Ben Wishaw and Martin Clunes was also strong. Meanwhile back at home the wives (Claire Skinner and Anne Reid) were also enjoying themselves. Some predictable turns but all done with such charm that the 2 hours flew by. A real treat.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFollowed by The Booze Cruise II: The Treasure Hunt (2005)
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content






