The Inbetweeners Movie
The Inbetweeners Movie
Will (Simon Bird), Simon (Joe Thomas), Jay (James Buckley) and Neil (Blake Harrison), have finished school forever, and are off on their first lads’ holiday. They’ve got two weeks in Malia with no parents, no teachers, no money, and little chance with the ladies.
2.8 out of 5 based on 12 reviews
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Omniscore:
|
| Certificate |
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| Genre |
Comedy |
| Director |
Ben Palmer |
| Cast |
James Buckley, Greg Davies, Belinda Stewart-Wilson, Joe Thomas, Blake Harrison, Emily Head Simon Bird |
| Studio |
Entertainment UK |
| Release Date |
August 2011 |
| Running Time |
97 mins |
| |
Will (Simon Bird), Simon (Joe Thomas), Jay (James Buckley) and Neil (Blake Harrison), have finished school forever, and are off on their first lads’ holiday. They’ve got two weeks in Malia with no parents, no teachers, no money, and little chance with the ladies.
Reviews
Empire Magazine
Ian Freer
"The performances from Bird, Thomas, Buckley and Harrison are pitch-perfect and amplify a sweetness that is only an undercurrent in the show."
24/08/2011
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The Independent
Anthony Quinn
"Funny? This shakes the house with funny."
19/08/2011
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The Sunday Times
Cosmo Landesman
"It’s both a satire and celebration of the British abroad."
21/08/2011
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Variety
Charles Gant
"While the fish-out-of-water tale will be best appreciated by the sitcom's legion of British fans, auds coming to it fresh may struggle to empathize."
18/08/2011
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The Independent on Sunday
Nicholas Barber
"Aside from the location, it keeps to the tone and the look of the TV series – and that's both the best and worst thing about it."
21/08/2011
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The Daily Telegraph
Tim Robey
"Not unlike herpes. It has two different gag ratios — the laughter one, and the urge-to-spew one. Both are high. Often they’re simultaneous."
18/08/2011
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The Guardian
Steve Rose
"The gags come crude, fast and in a language the target audience will understand, and the worst of the humour is offset by some fond observation of British holiday rituals and the witty, preternaturally mature narration of Will, the glasses-wearing intellectual of the gang."
17/08/2011
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The Times
Kate Muir
"Their efforts make The Hangover Part II look sophisticated. "
19/08/2011
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The Scotsman
Alistair Harkness
"Featuring the same actors, and made by the same creative team responsible for the show it's a toss-up as to who is to blame for it being this disappointing."
18/08/2011
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The Evening Standard
Derek Malcolm
"One doesn't require a Bergman or even a Fellini, it's simply that this film takes every easy way out there is for its laughs."
19/08/2011
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Total Film
Neil Smith
"The lads go on holiday but the laughs stay at home in this disappointing postscript to E4’s mint teen comedy."
17/08/2011
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Time Out
Derek Adams
"You can guess what’s going to happen from the moment they set foot in their ghastly holiday apartment block."
18/08/2011
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