Peter`s Friends (UK)
Click to read:
A British version of `The Big Chill`
Certificate: 15
Running Time: 98 mins
Retail Price: £12.99
Release Date:
Content Type: Movie
Synopsis:
Stephen Fry plays Peter, the owner of a stately home, who gathers together his friends from University on New Year`s Eve. It has been 10 years since they all gathered together for the last performance of their musical comedy review and things and people have changed. Their differences begin to affect the celebrations.
Special Features:
Interactive Menus
Scene Access
Video Tracks:
Pan & Scan 1.33:1
Audio Tracks:
Dolby Digital Stereo 2.0 English
Directed By:
Kenneth Branagh
Written By:
Rita Rudner
Martin Bergmann
Starring:
Richard Briers
Alex Lowe
Tony Slattery
Phyllida Law
Rita Rudner
Alphonsia Emmanuel
Kenneth Branagh
Emma Thompson
Stephen Fry
Imelda Staunton
Hugh Laurie
Soundtrack By:
Roger Taylor
Freddie Mercury
Brian May
Gavin Greenaway
John Deacon
Music From:
Giacomo Puccini
Director of Photography:
Roger Lanser
Editor:
Andrew Marcus
Costume Designer:
Stephanie Collie
Susan Coates
Production Designer:
Tim Harvey
Producer:
David Parfitt
Kenneth Branagh
Martin Bergmann
Executive Producer:
Stephen Evans
Distributor:
Entertainment In Video
Your Opinions and Comments
Note by DanB, DVD Reviewer
I fully appreciate that enjoying a film is a totally subjective thing, and you are entitled to your views. However, I think I`m on safe ground when I say that homosexuality, alcoholism, emotional rejection and grief are life issues which are not simply restricted solely to the "very upper-middle-class".
Note by SteveGough, 1st-time contributor
From art to life, from films to web-sites, pleasure and quality in all things are subjective. Some people look at Eastenders and see a mirror image of their lives, others see a gloomy, dismally written and badly acted TV show. And isn`t it funny how subjectively a phrase like "with all due respect" or "you are entitled to your views" will often seem like the feint before a punchline that suggests the exact opposite? My views and I are grateful for your tolerance, and feel suitably patronised. I offer this alternate insight:
You may find it as difficult as I did to empathise with the characters in this toffs-in-tweeds take on "The Big Chill". A reunion of Oxbridge revue veterans brings to light a series-worth of soap opera crises. The line between reality and the fictional lives of the characters blurs with the leads taken by Oxbridge revue veterans Fry, Laurie, Thompson and Branagh. A simple case of over-egging the pudding, there were too many cut-glass accents among the oak-panels, four-posters and antique antimacassars of the eponymous Peter`s stately home to strike a sympathetic chord at the heart of an Essex housing estate. The ending trades on what was at the time a media hot potato, the still-fresh spectre of the so-called gay plague. Its effectiveness really depends on the empathy the viewer has developed with the characters. Not to give too much away, Ken and Emma eventually split up.
... or was that just in the film?