There’s nothing here we haven’t seen done better before.
Starter For 10 (2007)
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Reviews Counted:73
Fresh:65
Rotten:8
Average Rating:6.9/10
Consensus: Starter For 10 is a spirited coming-of-age tale that remains charming and witty even as it veers into darker teritory. The unique setting of a quiz show makes the film wittier than your average romantic comedy.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for sexual content, language and a scene of drug use.
Runtime: 1 hr 36 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Feb 23, 2007 Limited
Box Office: $177,442
Synopsis: "Ever since I can remember, I've wanted to be clever," Brian Jackson confesses in voice over at the start of STARTER FOR 10. A working-class student from Essex navigating his first year at Bristol... "Ever since I can remember, I've wanted to be clever," Brian Jackson confesses in voice over at the start of STARTER FOR 10. A working-class student from Essex navigating his first year at Bristol University, Brian (James McAvoy) has a lot to prove. While his hometown mates1 worry about him turning into a poncey2 wanker3, Brian's biggest concern is making the team for the long-running British television quiz show University Challenge. (The game show, which began in 1962 and is something like the UK's answer to Jeopardy, pits four-member teams from posh4 universities against each other. "Starter" questions, worth ten points each, give the film its title.) Amidst Tarts & Vicars dances, anti-Apartheid rallies, minging6 dorm rooms and puffs of marijuana smoke, Brian also finds himself romantically torn between two very different co-eds: ultra-fit7 blonde bombshell and University Challenge teammate Alice (Alice Eve), and thoughtful, politically-conscious Rebecca Epstein (Rebecca Hall in Christopher Nolan's THE PRESTIGE). With Margaret Thatcher's economically depressed Blighty8 as a backdrop, and a killer, pitchperfect New Wave soundtrack—featuring music by The Cure, Wham!, Bananarama, Yaz, The Smiths, New Order, Tears For Fears, Echo and the Bunnymen, The Buzzcocks, and The Psychedelic Furs—in the foreground, STARTER FOR 10 is the great British teen 80s movie that never was... It is also altogether delightful, with UK comedy sensation Catherine Tate co-starring as Brian's steadfast mum9, and McAvoy (THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE'S Mr. Tumnus the Faun) delivering the kind of charming, humorous performance that reinvigorates a genre. Though Brian Jackson knows everything, like all honest coming-of-age stories, STARTER FOR 10 is ultimately about its hero discovering the difference between knowledge and wisdom. Directed by Tom Vaughan, based on the novel by David Nicholls, STARTER FOR 10 is produced by Tom Hanks, Gary Goetzman and Pippa Harris and executive produced by Sam Mendes, Steven Shareshian, Nathalie Marciano and Michelle Chydzik Sowa. --© Picturehouse [More]
Starring: James McAvoy, James Corden, Charles Dance, Alice Eve
Starring: James McAvoy, James Corden, Charles Dance, Alice Eve, Rebecca Hall, Simon Woods, Dominic Cooper, Ian Bonar
Director: Tom Vaughan
Director: Tom Vaughan
Producer: Gary Goetzman, Tom Hanks
Screenwriter: David Nicholls
Producer: Pippa Harris
Studio: Picturehouse
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Reviews for Starter For 10
Starter for Ten follows the formula from one unsurprising and unrealistic anecdote to another.
Starter for 10 is a mildly enjoyable romantic comedy that stays within the safe bounds of the genre's formula.
A film whose own wisdom about the world seems principally derived from innumerable coming-of-age tales.
I liked the actors and the tone, I loved the music here, but throughout the film I had a feeling of cinematic déjà vu.
It's a good thing the performances are subtle, since little else about Starter for 10 is. Director Tom Vaughan has a particularly leaden hand with music cues.
It is uniformly well acted, but the cast deserves better than this prepackaged, artificially preserved concoction.
There is an utter lack of visual energy at every turn, like every single take in the final cut was the last shot on that day of shooting.
Despite a very familiar premise and the shameless pandering towards the baby boomers still enamoured with post-punk '80s music that overwhelms the soundtrack, Tom Vaughan's "Starter for Ten" has its moments of sweetness and endearment.
It's a familiar cookie of laughs and romantic winces, crafted here with a fragrant Hughesian flair that saves the picture from cliché.
Starter for 10 brings a fresh approach to an old formula and the result is a romantic comedy that hits all the right buttons.
Unusual coming-of-age comedy which manages to locate the occasional bit of funny amidst all the lesson-learning and overcoming of adversity.
This is expertly crafted entertainment that follows all the beats of a traditional romantic comedy, but it’s done with such sincerity that it’s difficult to begrudge the odd descent into cliché.
The writing is nimble, the performances engaging and the story of a working-class boy who yearns to distinguish himself by acquiring knowledge is witty and intelligent.
For as lighthearted as Starter For 10 seems on the outside, there is plenty of subtle interpretation about how radically social freedoms have changed since the '80s.
James McAvoy may be the most likable British newcomer since Ewan McGregor; his glistening eyes can seduce audiences with their ability to show conflicting emotions.
Familiar enough to be instantly comfortable with and entertaining enough to be over with before you'd like to leave these characters.
There's nothing particularly insightful or brilliant about the film, but its charm and good humor take it a long way.
Here's proof that it's possible to make crowd-pleasing, eminently commercial films that aren't pandering or obnoxiously pushy.
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