Los Angeles Times by Michael Wilmington
One of the most entertaining movies this year, and one of the few that shows real invention and audacity, along with big-studio technical flash. [8 June 1986, p.C27]
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Julien Temple
Cast
Eddie O'Connell,
Patsy Kensit,
David Bowie,
James Fox,
Ray Davies,
Mandy Rice-Davies
Genre
Drama,
Music,
Romance
Set in 1950s London, this musical follows Colin, a young photographer and jazz aficionado. When the beautiful, career-oriented model Crepe Suzette breaks up with him, he seeks stardom and success to win her back. Meanwhile, racial tensions rise in Colin's neighborhood of Notting Hill.
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Los Angeles Times by Michael Wilmington
One of the most entertaining movies this year, and one of the few that shows real invention and audacity, along with big-studio technical flash. [8 June 1986, p.C27]
Variety
Absolute Beginners is a terrifically inventive original musical for the screen. Daring attempt to portray the birth of teenagedom in London, 1958, almost exclusively through song is based upon Colin MacInnes' cult novel about teen life and pop fashion in the percolating moments just before the youth cultural explosion in the early 1960s.
Variety by Staff (Not Credited)
Absolute Beginners is a terrifically inventive original musical for the screen. Daring attempt to portray the birth of teenagedom in London, 1958, almost exclusively through song is based upon Colin MacInnes' cult novel about teen life and pop fashion in the percolating moments just before the youth cultural explosion in the early 1960s.
Miami Herald
While it embraces many of the conventions of the movie- musical, Absolute Beginners overcomes the ready cliches with the crackling energy of jazz and youth. Both Kensit and O'Connell catch the rhythm of their personas early on, riding Temple's roller-coaster tale with care thrown to the wind. They careen off the brainless characters and the hard-knocks facts of life with a "who cares" resilience, never missing a beat in their quest for experience. [4 June 1986, p.D5]
TV Guide Magazine
A visually inventive and energetic pop musical.
Chicago Tribune by Dave Kehr
It remains an engaging, energetic film. [22 Jan 1987, p.9B]
Miami Herald by Tom Moon
While it embraces many of the conventions of the movie- musical, Absolute Beginners overcomes the ready cliches with the crackling energy of jazz and youth. Both Kensit and O'Connell catch the rhythm of their personas early on, riding Temple's roller-coaster tale with care thrown to the wind. They careen off the brainless characters and the hard-knocks facts of life with a "who cares" resilience, never missing a beat in their quest for experience. [4 June 1986, p.D5]
TV Guide Magazine by Staff (Not Credited)
A visually inventive and energetic pop musical.
The New York Times by Caryn James
Looking through these layers of time, this flashy, extravagant rock musical, which opens today at the Ziegfeld, elevates style to a symptom and cause of social change. And though it aims for more coherence than it delivers, it has endless flair with no self-importance...For all its unevenness, Absolute Beginners is high pop culture.
Chicago Reader by Jonathan Rosenbaum
A mixed success, but an exhilarating try.
Newsweek by David Ansen
The paradox of this razzle-dazzle movie is that it demonstrates the triumph of the advertising ethos it attacks. Still, it's bold and undeniably different (what other musical turns a race riot into a happy ending?). Under its brassy, celebratory surface it's selling a surprisingly dour message about the waylaid dreams of the teen revolution. [5 May 1986, p.78]
Los Angeles Times by Sheila Benson
Skim the pleasantly diverting surface of Absolute Beginners and you can easily forget that there is nothing contained beneath. [18 Apr 1986, p.C6]
Empire by Ian Nathan
A general disappointment, but then with David Bowie and Patsy Kensit what did you expect.
Time Out
Camp is everywhere, humour thin; and the soundtrack is very contemporary for a movie which in the pre-publicity boasted of its jazz origins. The whole film is an example of the strange influence of pop promo mentality on cinema. All that noise, all that energy, so little governing thought.
Washington Post by Paul Attanasio
What's left here is not so much a movie as an assault so unpleasant, it leaves you wondering what you could have done to deserve it. [27 May 1986, p.B3]
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