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Blow Dry (2001)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:63
Fresh:12
Rotten:51
Average Rating:4/10
Consensus: Heartwarming, but over-the-top and too formulaic.
Theatrical Release:Mar 9, 2001 Limited
Synopsis: The British Hairdressing Championship is coming to the small Yorkshire town of Keighley. The Mayor (Warren Clarke) is ecstatic--but initially the townspeople are underwhelmed. The exotic models and... The British Hairdressing Championship is coming to the small Yorkshire town of Keighley. The Mayor (Warren Clarke) is ecstatic--but initially the townspeople are underwhelmed. The exotic models and their even more exotic hairdressers arrive--among them reigning champion, Ray Robertson (Bill Nighy). The Mayor is disappointed when there is no local entry, especially since Keighley is the hometown of ex-champion, Phil Allen (Alan Rickman). But, Phil stopped competing when his model, Sandra (Rachel Griffiths), ran off with his wife, Shelley (Natasha Richardson). Shelley has cancer, and discovering it is terminal, she tries to reunite her family--Phil, their son Brian (Josh Hartnett), and Sandra--by entering the competition. Phil refuses. However, needled by the confident Ray, Brian enters on behalf of the family. Soon, they are cutting hair together again. Director Paddy Breathnach maintains the delicate balance between the pathos of Shelley's illness and the breathtaking flamboyance of the hairdressing competition, as it goes from outrageous camp to gorgeous fulfillment. Alan Rickman is splendid--especially when the phlegmatic Phil returns to competition with flashing scissors and tattooed feet. Natasha Richardson is touching as she fights to regain her family. And Rachel Griffiths gives a powerful performance, apparently in support, until she becomes the family's fabulous golden angel. [More]
Starring: Alan Rickman, Natasha Richardson, Josh Hartnett, Rachael Leigh Cook
Starring: Alan Rickman, Natasha Richardson, Josh Hartnett, Rachael Leigh Cook, Rachel Griffiths, Hugh Bonneville, Bill Nighy, Heidi Klum
Director: Paddy Breathnach
Director: Paddy Breathnach
Screenwriter: Simon Beaufoy
Producer: Sydney Pollack, William Horberg, Ruth Jackson
Studio: Miramax Films
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Release:
Aug 14, 2001
Reviews for Blow Dry
Blow Dry, the British comedy opening today, has a cast to die for, but that's about all that it has.
This is the second film in recent years on competitive hairdressing, and with any luck it'll be the last.
Apparently [the town inhabitants] haven't heard of the healing properties of chocolate or male stripping.
More interaction involving the hairdressers and the townspeople – along with the deletion of one or two meaningless side plots – might have given Blow Dry more body.
While there's no doubt that the estranged family will pull together victoriously, the audience is still held in suspense as to why anyone would ever pay to have a movie like this made.
It may be possible that people who never go to the movies will stumble across Blow Dry and find it a charming way to spend an hour and a half, but the rest of us will have the ending written in our heads by the end of the first five minutes.
It's not a good hair day for Blow Dry, in which The Full Monty writer Simon Beaufoy tries to mesh melodrama and camp, but comes up with merely a fraction of the inspiration of his previous international hit.
The result is formulaic, shamelessly manipulative and surprisingly watchable.
Things ... get hinky as the script struggles to wrap up its numerous tragedies and conflicts this movie is too synthetic to effectively deal with the subplots it introduces.
A real crowd-pleaser and one of the more successful of the recent wave of '50s-style, small-town British comedies in the wake of The Full Monty.
The finished product posters may be alluring, and the cut may look promising while it's occurring, but in the end, you probably won't recommend the mediocre results to your friends.
Few things can be counted on to lift a person's spirits better than a good haircut. If Blow Dry isn't quite so sure a bet, it probably comes close enough.
The only thing less attractive than the silly hairstyles of the competitors is the obvious machinations of the plot.
This is not the feel-good experience that The Full Monty was, unless your idea of a good time is watching a largely talented cast flail helplessly in a story that lets them down at nearly every turn.
If Blow Dry isn't a rousing triumph on the order of The Full Monty and Brassed Off, Rickman, Richardson and Nighy make sure it's a winning film.
You find yourself liking many of these people and even sort of rooting for the Cut Above team.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 36% 36% | Angels & Demons |
| 25% 25% | Four Christmases |
| 68% 68% | Funny People |
| 95% 95% | Star Trek |
| 14% 14% | The Ugly Truth |
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 83% 83% | Harry Potter and the H… |
| 67% 67% | Public Enemies |
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