Product Description A new 2K restoration of the second feature from the director of Local Hero, Bill Forsyth. Sixteen year old Gregory is an awkward, gangly Scottish lad who is in the midst of the throngs of puberty. The object of his affection is Dorothy, despite or in part because she is a talented striker who took his place on the school's boys' football team, he now demoted to distracted goalkeeper. Gregory tries to insinuate himself as much as possible in her life through her interests, such as learning the Italian language, without ever directly coming out and telling her that he likes her. Gregory's male friends are of no help in advising him on how to get into a relationship with Dorothy. The only person with whom he confides that provides any constructive advice is his ten-year old sister, Madeline. When Gregory finally gets the nerve to ask Dorothy out on a date, the outcome of the question is not quite what he expects. He learns that Dorothy talks to her girlfriends about such issues as much as Gregory does with his friends, each side strategizing to their own desired end. Review Winner - Best Screenplay - BAFTA Awards Winner - Most Promising Director - London Critics Circle Film Awards Nominated - Most Outstanding Newcomer - BAFTA Film Award Official Selection - London Film Festival Official Selection - Glasgow FilmFestival Official Selection - Goteborg Film Festival ---This enchanting comedy, made in Scotland and only the second feature to be written and directed by Mr. Forsyth, who is 33 years old, is one of the cheeriest unsentimental reports on the human condition since Francois Truffaut's Small Change, which it recalls because it, too, is almost entirely concerned with teen-agers and their juniors. Further, like Mr. Truffaut, Mr. Forsyth accepts nothing at face value. No character, emotion, gesture or response is too commonplace not to be re-examined and, in the process, miraculously seen anew. In this fashion, what might have been an ordinary comedy about the perils and pressures of growing up is transformed into something as exotic as a visit to another planet, a place that looks and sounds familiar but whose gravitational pull is about one-tenth of Earth's. Though Mr. Forsyth's dialogue frequently echoes the kind of mad reasonableness we associate with Jules Feiffer, and though Gregory and his sister, Madeline, are distant kin to Holden and Phoebe Caulfield, Gregory's Girl is a movie with an original, distinct personality. It floats effortlessly over its landscape, seeing all from a marvelously cockeyed perspective all its own. - Vincent Canby, The New York Times Bill Forsyth's Gregory's Girl is a charming, innocent, very funny little movie... The movie contains so much wisdom about being alive and teenaged and vulnerable that maybe it would even be painful for a teenager to see it; it's not much help, when you're suffering from those feelings of low self-esteem and an absolutely hopeless crush, to realize that not only are you in pain and suffering an emotional turmoil, but you're not even unique. Maybe only grown-ups should see this movie. You know, people who have gotten over the pains of unrequited love (hollow laugh). - Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-TimesGregory's Girl is a delightful surprise from of Scotland, not one of the recognized film capitals of the world. Bill Forsyth, formerly a maker of industrial films, made Gregory's Girl for $400,000 with a cast of non-professionals. It provides more pure entertainment than many of Hollywood's overproduced epics. - Bob Thomas, Associated Press A funny and touching teen romance from Scottish director Bill Forsyth. While the plot is a straight, simple romance, the true charm of the film comes from its quirky characters, its general air of tolerance and good will and some irrepressible and delightfully absurd touches that creep (or waddle) along the periphery of the narrative. With this unpretentious little film, Forsyth decisively demonstrates that there was still life in the classic British comedy more than 30 years after its heyday. --TV GuideQuirky and utterly endearing. - Geoff Andrews, Time Out Was there ever a more charming film than Gregory's Girl? It may not contain many jokes, and there are only one or two laugh-out-loud moments, but almost every scene puts a smile on your face. From the opening, in which a sex-starved schoolboy faints off-camera at the sight of a nurse removing her bra, to the closing sequence, in which Gregory and his new girlfriend dance in the park while lying down, the film is filled with quirkiness and, well, charm. Gregory's Girl put Scottish director Bill Forsyth on the map. He went on to make bigger films, but he never found a more engaging blend of offbeat comedy, warmth and insight into the peculiarities of the teenage mind. - Paul Gent, The Telegraph That strange, sometimes painful and frequently ludicrous process called growing up has rarely been more perfectly delineated than in Forsyth's sparkling comedy, still a barrel of laughs thirty years on. It takes a simple premise, uses a young and untried cast, and never strives for 'social significance,' cheap laughs, or manufactured drama, yet the end result is a gem that scooped a hatful of awards, regularly makes the 'Best of British' film lists and has such a status in the nation's cultural psyche that a clip was used in the 2012 Olympics opening ceremony. - Jeff Robson, Eye For Film Bill Forsyth's superbly judged mixture of romantic yearnings and the offside trap is so well observed and poignantly rendered it could play just as well in Mombassa as Motherwell. - Ian Freer, Empire Much of the pic's peculiar fascination comes from tangential scenes, limning each character's odd obsession, be it food, girls, soccer, or just watching the traffic drive by. --Variety
M**R
Scottish comedy made me smile and laugh and remember
Gregory's Girl is one of those "Comedies from the British Isles" that I put in the same general category as "Calendar Girls" and "Waking Ned Devine" and "The Full Monty".The humor across the ocean is a little different than in the US and if you're not willing to tune your ear to the wonderful cadences of a Scottish Brogue, then bypass Gregory and his girls.But for those willing to wade in - Gregory's Girl presents an opportunity to be delighted with little to offend (if you discount the opening scene where Gregory and his buddies are voyeuristically peeping at a local nurse undressing from outside her window - there is a moment of scant nudity seen from afar.)Gregory (played with full teenaged awkwardness by John Gordon Sinclair) reminds us that there is little more awkward and gangly than a tall teenager, but this Gregory has a good sense of humor about himself and his inadequacies.Made in 1980 in the days before political correctness Dee Hepburn as Dorothy enters Gregory's world as a girl trying out for Gregory's football (soccer) team - specifically, she is trying out for Gregory's position because he's not scoring any goals and his team has lost 8 games in a row.There are plenty of "girls can't play" comments before it becomes apparent that Dorothy is the most talented player among the bunch. Rather than being threatened by her a Dorothy craze sweeps the school and she finds herself being interviewed by the school paper and bootleg photos of her are being sold by enterprising students. Gregory falls for Dorothy as well - hard - and perhaps because of their sports connection he seems to think himself more suited for her than the other blokes.Gregory is gangly and awkward, though, and the scenes where we see Gregory getting romantic advice and trying to make himself more desirable are accurate and hilarious.Will Gregory make a hit with Dorothy? Well - get the movie and find out!
D**.
I loved the film when I saw it on its original release and, 37 years on, it was a great pleasure to revisit.
Utterly charming coming-of-age film. Basically credible, but with delightful overlays of both surrealism and humour. Serious flashback to my own adolescence: the boys were horribly gauche and the girls really together. I have to fess up that I associated more with the two losers heading for 'Caracus' than with Gregory. I loved the film when I saw it on its original release and, 37 years on, it was a great pleasure to revisit.
M**Y
Blu-ray Import looks and sounds beautiful
The Blu-ray import from Second Sight is region-free (with drawing on cover). Video is 1080p at 1.85:1 Aspect ratio. Audio is LPCM dual mono (uncompressed) with original Scottish dialogue on one track or dubbed USA version with new accents. It runs 92 minutes according to the box and has subtitles for hard of hearing and commentary track by director Bill Forsyth and (friend?) Mark Kermode, "Bill Forsyth: The Early Years" interview and "GG Memories" interview of Clare Grogan. The film has been restored beautifully overall, but some dark scenes are grainy. Deep black levels and eye-popping color, tho.I won't say much about the movie. I liked the girl playing Gregory's little sister Madeline, but unfortunately she doesn't seem to have done any other films (at least under the same name). The coach looks & acts a bit like Begbie from Trainspotting and that movie (and book?) also stole a key line from Gregory's Girl about how in the future there won't be any boys or girls - just wankers. GG clearly influenced many other British movies, too. It would be great if someone released the director's "Comfort and Joy" (light comedy about radio DJ who stumbles into a war between two rival ice cream makers at Christmas time) in USA or all region Blu-ray."It's hard work being in love, eh? Especially when you don't know which girl it is."
F**S
A Feel-Good Film
I've seen this film several times in the last 30 years and enjoy it more each time. The characters are likeable and the story is warm, funny, and intelligent. It is by far, one of the best (and cleanest) films I've seen about adolescence and growing up.However, if you've been brought up and is fixated on the average American film diet, you may find this dull and boring as some of the reviews show. It is not for the average movie-goer. That's why this is considered a cult classic.
R**N
Excellent film
This is one of the best films of this genre. It is one of my favorite films of any genre. It's unassuming, unpretentious, and not melodramatic.It's just a nice pleasant experience. The pace is wonderfully casual. This adds to the realism. There are so many interesting, unique, well cast and acted characters. This includes the penguin. :) The ending may seem anticlimatic, but I like the way it winds down slowly like a real "day in the life". The evening of long shadows seems to take forever, which is how it must really be in a place at such a high latitude like Scotland in the summer. And the final tryst is so innocent and shy and low-key and private. That's how it is. At least that's how it is in the best scenarios. I think half the fun is the Scottish brogue. I want a copy on DVD!
M**4
Delightful movie
I loved this movie when I rented it soon after it was released on video in the '80's. After years of telling people about it, I decided I needed to own it. It was lost when I lent it to a friend, so I bought it again. It is a delightful and gentle movie. It's about teenagers in a Scottish town, and manages to depict their lives without resorting to promiscuity, violence, drugs, or gangs. This snapshot of Gregory's life is treated with humor and respect. I highly recommend it.
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