Jamie New is a 16-year-old who doesn't quite fit in. Instead of pursuing a traditional career, he dreams of becoming a drag queen. Supported by his mother and friends, Jamie overcomes discri... Read allJamie New is a 16-year-old who doesn't quite fit in. Instead of pursuing a traditional career, he dreams of becoming a drag queen. Supported by his mother and friends, Jamie overcomes discrimination and bullying to step into the spotlight.Jamie New is a 16-year-old who doesn't quite fit in. Instead of pursuing a traditional career, he dreams of becoming a drag queen. Supported by his mother and friends, Jamie overcomes discrimination and bullying to step into the spotlight.
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 2 wins & 11 nominations total
- Ellie Hayler
- (as Lauren 'Fidget' Haywood)
Summary
Featured reviews
It has a heart and is definitely feel good. I do think it's definitely tailored for a straight audience. It has a softness and digestible feel.
It's painfully northern (I'm northern). I think younger Northern people struggle to act, they all sound like they are in year 7 drama class. Obviously Sarah Lancashire is great and had such a deep feel to her character. She brought a lot. The lead...he's a good singer.
I think it's too long and the script is rough, it feels like a 40 year old has wrote teenage characters. Everything they say just sound so off. Aside from the dialogue I also felt like the story was strange. I think it seems very muddy. There is a internal conflict that comes of of absolutely nowhere right in the middle of the movie. Totally unwarranted to this character that we have watched for over an hour. It makes complete sense when explained but why they chose to place this in the middle of the movie without building to it, I have no idea. Another strange thing for me was the choice of dress at the end. It was like he went in granny's closet? Such a strange choice.
I'm glad movies like this are becoming more common and I want them to continue and become even better.
This is a hugely enjoyable film, with some fabulous performances from all of the cast. In these times where we seem to be going backwards in terms of tolerance, it's great to see such a positive film about identity and sexuality, of wanting to be different and showing relationships between people of such different backgrounds and origins.
Richard E Grant is absolutely fantastic as the old drag queen just as Max Harwood is as the young one. Love the relationships between Jamie and Pritti, Sarah Lancashire is great as always she always is and Shobna Gulati is a hoot.
I really hope that people look past the score here and read the glowing reviews of the films. Even as someone who is straight and who likes different music to this, I found this film to thoroughly entertaining .
The heart and charm of the stage musical is not apparent in this adaptation. It feels like an ode to narcissism and self-obsession, rather than a tribute to self-expression. Maybe this film would have had resonance fifteen years ago, but it feels so out of sync with the current zeitgeist. The more it tries to be inspiring, the more on-the-nose and garish it becomes, and the more I want to crawl back into my metaphorical closet...
The main fault of this film is the direction. It lacks vision. It's trying to be a 2000s British feel-good movie one minute, then the next it's a parody of a Netflix teen drama. Either way, with the number of stereotypes it perpetuates, it feels like an LGBT story more concerned with pleasing its straight audience than its gay one. If it had rooted itself in a time and place - 2010 Sheffield - examined that culture, and honed in on the mother-son emotional centre, then it could have been something interesting.
It's not a bad film, per se. It just doesn't know what note it's trying to hit... But, alas, the doe-eyed beauty of Sarah Lancashire's performance broke my heart and Work of Art will always be that bop...
6/10.
Did you know
- TriviaTo prepare for his role, Richard E. Grant watched 11 seasons of RuPaul's Drag Race in three weeks.
- Quotes
Pritti Pasha: Oh my days, look at ya! You're amazing. You're fearless. You're Emmeline Pankhurst.
Jamie New: Who's she?
Pritti Pasha: Oh, she were like Beyoncé back in't day.
- Crazy creditsInspired by the True Story of Margaret and Jamie Campbell aka Fifi la True..
- ConnectionsFeatured in Sophie Ellis-Bextor & The Feeling: While You're Still Young (2021)
- SoundtracksAnd You Don't Even Know It
Written by Dan Gillespie Sells and Tom MacRae
Performed by Max Harwood and Year 11
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Mọi người nói về Jamie
- Filming locations
- Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England, UK(City of Sheffield is where Jamie's house is in ceremonial South Yorkshire County, in traditional County of Yorkshire.)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 55m(115 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1