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  • I'm always surprised when a film I'd heard had mixed reviews at best, turns out to be so much better than I was expecting and Cemetery Junction is a great example of this.

    It's an old fashioned feel good movie. Sure it's maybe a little twee in places and ties things up nicely at the end but what's wrong with that sometimes? Great casting with superb performances from the central few characters and again a stunning turn from Ralph Fiennes. How good an actor is that guy? Poignant, touching, both gently and laugh out loud funny in places, a great character driven plot and just very very good film making IMO. Great use of music too, which like Tarantino movies always adds massively to the overall appeal.

    Can't recommend it enough. Gervais and Merchant should be very proud of themselves and I hope they're aware that this is a much better film than the box office takings would suggest.

    Similar film styles would be East is East, Sideways and maybe, Letter to Brezhnev. If you liked those, watch this. You'll love it.
  • Jakksid14 April 2010
    "Cemetery Junction" is Ricky Gervais's second attempt at directing a major motion picture. A fan of his previous work in television but having been disappointed by "The Invention of Lying" I was not sure what to expect. The final result was a 95 minute movie that was flawed yet very fun to watch and something to lose yourself in for a short period of time.

    The plot of "Cemetery Junction" evolves around three young men in 1973 who are desperately trying to avoid spending the rest of their lives in working class Reading and ending up like their parents. The film itself is mainly a drama but there is plenty of well-placed, classic Gervais comedy throughout. The majority is setting the scene and developing the characters. However, this leads to the final twenty minutes seeming quite rushed with slightly choppy editing and throwing in a few clichés which it had previously done a good job of avoiding. The acting was brilliant for the most part, but I felt Christian Cooke (who probably has the most screen time out of the trio of friends) was a little wooden.

    Overall, "Cemetary Junction" is an enjoyable film that should please Gervais fans yet can be more widely appreciated as he is attempting to do something different and, in my opinion, does a pretty good job of it.

    7/10
  • Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant's nostalgic comedy drama of 1970s Britain has its heart in the right place. OK, there is nothing strikingly original here – think 'The Likely Lads' meets American buddy movie spliced with stock Gervais stand-up material – but the craft of this movie lies not in breaking boundaries. Instead, it offers its audience a chance to feel the warm cosiness of familiarity.

    The film charts the hopes and dreams of three friends as they seek to break out of a small, stagnating community before they end up trapped in the same dead-end lives of their parents. Their loyalty to each other forms the heart of the story, even as they come to realise that their aspirations will inevitably lead them in different directions. The motivation for their friendship relies on a genuine apprehension that there may be no escape from the stifling 50s attitude that pervades their community. This is, as they so wryly remark, a town that the Swinging Sixties passed by.

    The characters work well together – there's an engaging chemistry between the three relatively unknown actors. Christian Cooke plays Freddie Taylor, the boy with a job with an insurance company, hoping to leave behind the factory work of his father. Tom Hughes is excellent as the angry, rebellious Bruce, appalled by his dad's lack of spirit yet all too aware of his own grim prospects. The trio is completed by Jack Doolan as 'Snork', the hapless station announcer looking up to the flair of his closest friends. The three leads are ably supported by a cast that includes Ralph Fiennes and Emily Watson, as well as some familiar faces from the Gervais and Merchant back catalogue. A prize for anyone who spots Karl Pilkington's fetching moustache…

    Whilst there are moments where the dialogue appears more than a little stilted, for the most part the action fizzes nicely between the three characters. He may only have a small role within the actual film, but Gervais' voice is clearly audible whenever there is an intelligent put-down or a comic observation. At times this intrudes on the authenticity of the characters, but generally the dialogue allows for a neat separation between Gervais' inclination towards biting comic scrutiny, and his more tempered capacity for gentle human interaction.

    Including a jukebox medley of a soundtrack that includes 70s classics from, among others, David Bowie and T-Rex, the film has that reflective rose-tinted-spectacle feel that has become so familiar to us in American films, but is far less common with the British cinema industry. Perhaps it's the weighty budget behind this film that sets it apart from other recent British period pieces. Perhaps it's the ability of the directors to throw off their typical British scepticism and capture that sense of breezy reminiscence.

    Whatever the answer, this is, for me, far more of an "American" film than movies such as 'Trainspotting', 'The Full Monty', or 'This Is England'. However, there is enough self-conscious humour and knowing sideways glances to make us realise that this is still a British film by a pair of British writers who, in 'The Office', gave us the best portrayal of British society for the new millennium. Gervais and Merchant have confirmed in this film that they are just about capable of making that dangerous leap from television to cinema. There is hopefully more to come, but 'Cemetery Junction' shows that their tongue-in-cheek blend of laughter and tears isn't likely to end with 'The Office' and 'Extras'.

    James Gill Twitter @jg8608 Find more reviews at http://web.me.com/gilljames/Single_Admission
  • A seductive film. A drama , like a comedy. About ages, choices, appearences, mariage, friendship, teens, love, about small things defining each of us and about freedom. A film like an old song. Not for "70's atmosphere, but for accuracy of a near reality to you feel. A film about life, in its basic characteristics and about fundamental option defining it. The best scene, reminding the portraits of Vermeer-Emily Watson preparing the tea for her Mr. Kendrick , in blue dress, viewed from open door .
  • I can't say I'm disappointed in this film, because with Ricky's touch few things can remain boring, or uninteresting. If you have seen Ricky interviewed about this film, he'll tell you exactly what influenced him to write and direct this film. However, unlike Invention of Lying which was pretty original, though its influences were clear, one cannot look at Cemetery junction without thinking of the many, many coming to age films he or she has seen. In other words, in his other works, Ricky's influences blend in with his originality and gave a unique product. IN cemetery junction, however, his influences take center stage and dominate the film, not allowing for a great deal of originality to shine through.

    This is a solid work from Gervais, and as he says, it is a beautiful love-letter to Britain. It is truly disappointing that Gervais could not make something original out of it. Maybe, I am pursuing this point fiercely, but it is the main problem of the movie. When you look at Cemetery junction, you can not stop to think of endless other films that have pursued the same content. If you are not a big movie buff, or just like to see Gervais and Merchant you won't be disappointed, but you are not going to get a highly original work as The Office.

    The acting is also decent at best. The problem with the acting is not the actors themselves, but is their over-dominance on the role. They are not comfortable in playing the characters; they over-react in ways that are truly unnecessary for this film. They all want to take center stage (the main male, central characters), and this need for dominating the role really undermines the true talent that they posses.

    I walked out of the theater not disappointed, but not charmed either. I can best describe my immediate reaction as indifference; it was kind of like, "oh, I just watched a Gervais' film that was okay;" unlike the admiration that I had for his TV work or earlier films.

    In addition, the music in the film and the soundtrack is very typical of seventies and eighties music. I wish Gervais had chosen varied songs, similar to Tarantino, in his film. He chooses instead a large variety of popular songs by Roxy Music, Springsteen etc. They are too familiar to truly leave an impression on the audience.
  • Cemetery Junction is one of those poor, small British towns, where the men go to work in factories and the women try to keep their kids out of jail. Freddy (Christian Cooke) wants something different; he wants to wear a suit to work, drive a Rolls Royce home to a beautiful wife and kids in a big house. He thinks this is a more noble life to live, and at least he's doing something about it.

    I'm presuming this is a personal project for Ricky Gervais. The honesty and sheer accuracy of the time shine throughout the film. "Cemetery Junction" is a slice-of-life for young men growing up in poor suburbs in the 1970s. Freddy wants to get a job, his friends just want to get out. As they strive for what is supposed to be a better life, they realize the dark truths within everybody else in the town and what awaits them in their future.

    "Cemetery Junction" is not the laugh-out-loud, farcical comedy that we would expect from Gervais. It's a meaningful, subtle dramedy exploring young men coming of age. And here, Gervais himself has certainly come of age as a director, we know this is 1970s England, looking poor and spectacular at the same time, and highlighting some exceptional performances by the young cast of Cooke, Tom Hughes, Matthew Goode, Jack Doolan, Emily Watson and the beautifully angelic Felicity Jones.
  • It's summer of 1973. Freddie Taylor (Christian Cooke) comes from working class suburb of Cemetery Junction. He doesn't want to follow his father (Ricky Gervais) into the factories. He takes a job selling life insurance from district manager Mr Kendrick (Ralph Fiennes) and Mike Ramsay (Matthew Goode). He has a cool friend Bruce Pearson (Tom Hughes) and an idiot friend Snork (Jack Doolan). Childhood acquaintance and his boss's daughter Julie Kendrick (Felicity Jones) returns to town and is now engaged to Mike Ramsay. Mrs Kendrick (Emily Watson) is the long suffering wife.

    Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant have mashed together a lot of coming-of-age stories for the setup of this movie. It's got great actors although the three male leads are unknown to me. That is its main drawback for the first half. It takes a little while for me to get involved with these friends. Then the movie take some interesting turns in the characters' journeys. It takes some digs at the stale British life. It's a bit uneven between broad comedy and tough social commentary. But I do like the effort it makes.
  • Though I knew Ricky Gervais and Steve merchant directed it, I had no prior expectations about this movie. I did not know what it was about nor did i read any reviews before watching. Trust me, that is the best way to watch Cemetery Junction. Don't listen to the reviews of jaded film critics who over-analyze and complain about other movies being similar. This is a movie that make you feel good without explicitly being a feel-good movie. I came out feeling nostalgic for 70s Britain though I grew up in 90s USA. The dialog is witty, smart, often funny and sometimes touching. It deftly touches on themes of loss, regret, friendship, love, and following one's dreams. This is my favorite British film in quite some time. You will not regret watching this movie.
  • Stephen Merchant and Ricky Gervais are behind two of my favourite ever TV shows in Extras and The Office. Unfortunately, neither of them have ever lit up the cinema screen (Gervais was ina couple of rather bad films) to the extent that many Biritsh film fans probably would've hoped. Finally, they're collaborating for a film called Cemetery Junction and, for the most part anyway, they're at their best.

    The film is set in the 1970s; a semi-autobiographical comedy-drama about three young men reluctantly heading towards adulthood. It's set in Reading and has three total unknowns in the lead role, yet somehow the story works. You've got eager white-collar hopeful Freddie (Christian Cooke), lippy Jagger-ish rebel Bruce (Tom Hughes) and their lardy lovable friend Snork (Jack Doolan). The basic setup is that they want to get out of Reading and escape their tedious lives of messing about and getting drunk.

    It's a pretty simple and unoriginal setup and the film does take a while to get going. Ricky Gervais' comedy work in films has been patchy in the past and in the first 30 minutes or so it worried me that Cemetery Junction looked to be going the same way as some of previous craptaculars like The Invention of Lying. The bad jokes and awkward euphemisms get in the way of the films cool, breezy 70s vibe that director Stephen Merchant has created. Basically, it felt like Gervais was trying too hard.

    Luckily, things start to pick up later on and Gervais and Merchant's gift for creating fine comedy starts to show. The introduction of Ralph Fiennes, Felicity Jones and Emily Watson coincide with the films upturns in fortunes. Fiennes does a sharp sketch in callous entitlement as the boss from hell, and Emily Watson lends her sad wisdom to the role of his wife, an unappreciated person who wants her daughter (Felicity Jones) to fare better. It would be unfair to suggest that the 3 leads were a bit incompetent, but Gervais seemed to be using their youth as an excuse for cheap gags and puns before introducing some proper comedy when the more experienced trio turned up. It feels like we're in safer hands from here on, and the film's spreading warmth is its salvation.

    That's not to say that the 3 leads are bad. Tom Hughes is especially good; he's charismatic and his timing is practically perfect. The other two don't fare quite as well, but improve as the film itself does.

    Cemetery Junction got off to a worrying start. Gervais' writing was at odds with Merchants directing style until Ralph Fiennes and team turned up which seemed to flick Gervais' funny switch on and he started to turn out some really great moments. The first 30 minutes is undeniably awkward and dull, but if you can get through that then you'll find an exceptionally funny film in which Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant finally get their great comedy right on the big screen.

    3/5
  • I truly loved this film especially after the rubbish films I've seen of late.

    It was funny and emotional from start to finish. It was nostalgic of the 70's and the music was fabulous!

    Ricky Gervais didn't do the usual Ricky acting and his part wasn't overplayed. The two main characters played by Christian Cooke and Tom Hughes were very good indeed.

    It had a good story line, you cared about the characters, the music was great and it was hilarious.

    My money was well spent and I would recommend this film without hesitation.
  • There is much to enjoy about this film, from its authentic early seventies look and feel, to the realistic dialogue of the period, and a script which is often a delight. It is much more than a romantic comedy, or a comedy drama, with its clever messages just as apt now as they were for the time the film personifies, and it is the inspired moments of direction by the writers which make it such a delight to watch.

    I haven't always enjoyed the Gervais/Merchant partnership in operation perhaps because the subject matter is often just too clever for its own good. But this glimpse of out of town Reading clearly demonstrates how good Gervais and Merchant can be when opening our eyes to familiar fare from a slightly different perspective and their own devilishly cunning way of expressing all our faults. We are treated to territory that is always embarrassingly close to us, regardless of era.

    The acting is classy from a very sure footed Christian Cooke as Freddie, an excellent Jack Doolan as Snork, a wonderfully expressive Felicity Jones as Julie, and all the support. I'd give each a mention were it not for the limited space. We are given a decent insight to each and every one of the characters on display and a chance to feel what they feel, and this is down to first class screenplay and direction.

    Cemetery Junction isn't a great film but it is certainly good enough to receive seven out of ten.
  • Loved this film. It really took me back. They don't quite nail the period, but you can tell when Fiennes is talking about his schooldays at the start, about leaving at 14, that they're blurring things a bit, or at least his character doesn't realize how things have changed... The preoccupation with obscenity, for example, is more 60s than 70s. (They work the idea so much of the Swinging 60s passing Cemetery Junction by that it's almost homage to Tom Courtenay and Rita Tushingham and that crowd!) It's England before punk, before the computer revolution, when the establishment thought they had won the argument that there was no cause left worth rebelling for/against, when there was still a workshop rather than silicon chip flavor to working life.

    You can criticize the Hollywood stuff if you like, but Gervais and Merchant like to work where they can at different levels, as long as they get to take the mick out of all of them. I didn't hear the old radio shows much, but enough to know that. This is no exception. Not a strong plot. You have seen it lots of times before. Billy Liar is a better variation. But great dialog, great comic acting , beautifully observed, very funny, fantastic soundtrack. The only time I have ever liked the Osmonds' Crazy Horses. Great entertainment. You'd need to be really hard to please to be disappointed on that score. Personally I'd have liked a bit more sync with the Reading Festival, maybe some Rory Gallagher on the soundtrack, but bluesy Zeppelin will do, I'm not complaining. I'll take 2 stars off, though.

    You still have to read between the lines to see the influence Ireland is starting to have. Made me wonder if they were starting to chicken out a bit from the path they've established, but we'll see, and I think there is something there. In the meantime, if you fancy a really funny film set in Belfast (different decade, 73 in Belfast was hell) there's always "An Everlasting Piece". But Cemetery Junction is not as petty and insignificant as some of the reviewers suggest. What exactly were they expecting? "Jane Eyre"? "War and Peace"?
  • ohmysim14 April 2010
    I expected this film to be about restless teenagers escaping their small town, and while this is generally what the film is about, most of the film is spent setting the scene.

    Set in 1970's Reading, the story follows three young men living life as they've always done (graffiti, bar fights, womanising), desperate to make something of themselves and not end up like their parents.

    I'm pretty indifferent to Ricky Gervais so I'm sure people who like his work would probably enjoy this more than I did. However, there are strong performances from the largely unknown younger cast, as well as some very funny dialogue (the exaggerated, Daily-Mail grandma is particularly brilliant). Merchant/Gervais have created a nostalgic portrait of small-town life but this never really gets going the way it could. I suppose you could say that it's not meant to get going, that it's meant to reflect the static nature of their lives, but it starts to drag in the latter half of film. The cast is excellent though; as usual, Ralph Fiennes is a wonderful villain, with subtle underplaying from Emily Watson as his oppressed wife.

    However, I really couldn't stand Felicity Jones' horribly clichéd hippie-photographer and I thought the lingering close shots of the main characters looking purposeful and serious was kind of self-indulgent/unnecessary.

    In short, I did find this film relatively enjoyable, albeit quite slow paced, but I wouldn't watch it again.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Like David Brent, Ricky Gervais was over-promoted. Sure, The Office (and to a lesser extent, Extras) was great, but that was it. His subsequent comedy routines, TV shows and the two films have failed to live up to expectations. Is this because he found fame too fast? Most comedians have to endure the hard graft of amateur clubs where they slowly and sometimes painfully hone their skills. Actors get bit parts before their big break. Ricky Gervais ran before he could walk.

    I used to live in Cemetery Junction, Reading - as did he - and this is where the story is allegedly set. In real life, it was a sleazy, rundown, multicultural urban area. By contrast, the film landscape was shot in Stroud, Gloucestershire, an attractive Cotswold market town, one-fifth of the size of Reading and without any inner city pretensions. Some of the shots show a picturesque sunny high street where people look like they want to stay not run away. And it's got a cracking dance hall!

    The railway station (also very charming) in the film is called Cemetery Junction. But, as any resident of Clapham, Loughborough or Effingham would tell you, that means the town is called Cemetery. Now that would be a interesting name.

    The characters are stereotypical, the plot formulaic and the ending predictable. There are odd moments of warmth and humour but, on the whole, Cemetery Junction is a grave disappointment.
  • This film is about a teenager from a deprived part of Britain in 1970's, who decided to live a different life and was determined to climb up the social ladder.

    I was expecting "Cemetery Junction" to be a comedy as it is a Ricky Gervais film, so I thought the first half was an absolute train wreck. The jokes were in the form of endless insults to other people, which was not funny. Worse still, there was no discernible plot apart from three teenagers mucking about. The first half of the film is so dull and depressing! I should have known it was not a comedy, as Ricky Gervais is not in the lead but has a small supporting role as one of the teenager's father.

    Once I realised the film was a drama instead of a comedy, I appreciated the film a little more. When the teenagers finding their calling, the plot starts to be engaging. However, I have already lost all interest. If "Cemetery Junction" was marketed as a drama, it could have more success.
  • Whilst it may make you chuckle occasionally Cemetery Junction never felt like a comedy for me, or a drama for that matter.

    So what shall we call it...don't know, nothing springs to mind.

    We meander from character as they examine there lives as they try to summon up the courage and the reasoning for leaving their home town to make a new life somewhere else.

    There are some nice moments and the film overall feels quite realistic in how it presents the characters feelings.
  • It started as a less funny Trainspotting and I was really looking forward to good British humour and some Ewanesque performance. Instead I had to contend with a clichéd plot, a good looking guy with nice hair that repeats the whole movie what other people told him and ends up predictably ending up with the girl. And no, I don't feel I've spoilt anything here, it was obvious from the setup scene. And it was boring, too!

    I was also disappointed that Ralph Fiennes played in this one in such a flat and unchallenging role. I really love the guy and it hurts to see him play less and less interesting characters. All well known actors (Fiennes, Gervais, Emily Watson) have played important characters, but not very complex roles, leaving it all to the three (and a half) young actors interpreting the major roles. That would have been a very good move if the young'uns would have played well. However, the main character was rather bland, with an actor that did not shine nor lines that would have inspired anything. Paradoxically, the other two guys, particularly Jack Doolan, played a lot better!

    So, bottom line: if you can get over the lack of subtlety in the script and dialogue, the movie is a light fun coming of age film. There are some good lines there that evoke a chuckle or even a small laugh, but overall it all comes down as average. "Choose life" made a whole lot more sense when the people involved had real problems.
  • So many absolutely priceless moments. You can see Gervais and Merchant's masterful moments here. The writing is so top notch, so many unexpected twists that make it an utter delight to watch. And the ending is so unpredictable and wonderful. Every actor was just at the top of their game. You have to credit so much of that to the director(s).
  • Gervais/Merchant's first feature film is certainly worth a look, but not necessarily what you'd expect from the genius comic duo. Granted Gervais has stressed since pre-production that this is a more dramatic oriented film. While the film revolves around three friends, only two bring an enjoyable stimulation to the film, and unfortunately the one who doesn't happens to be the main character. While the acting is neither poor nor above and beyond, you do not feel apart of nor feel any reality behind Freddie's motivations or central plot.

    Gervais himself who appears maybe five times in the film will unfortunately let hardcore fans down as his scenes feel the most contrived and desperate for laughs in an otherwise seemingly unfunny film. As though Gervais wanted to make a quite dramatic film but had some desperation to gather some laughs whenever he's called to action himself. To coincide with the uneasy relationship between audiences and Freddie's journey, the film at times feels choppy and moving quite slowly for a 90 minute film. I personally find Gervais downfall to be in his time restrictions. He made it clear during the production of the dreadful Invention of Lying that he does not feel a comedy should be any longer than 90 minutes. While Ghost Town his best, in my opinion, feature film yet is of course the longest. It seems in his development process Gervais insists on severing scenes that while as a stand alone scene are of little value, they would crucially link the film's plot development in a more fashionable way. While this of course is mainly conjecture since I have not seen the films with certain scenes in place and perhaps instead of making a decent film a hit, would instead make excruciating.

    However unlike the dreaded Invention of Lying who's main plot development involves ten montages, poor transitions and amateur editing, Cemetery Junction does flow as a whole much better, but still falls short of the perfection of the Office or Extras.

    Having said that the positives of this movie certainly outweigh the negatives. The story is nice, although almost completely unreal. The side story with Bruce and his dad is certainly the highlight of the film even it is painfully predictable. And the nice love issues with Snoggy are quite good. Also an excellent performance from Ralph Fiennes. Additionally there is a hilarious scene with Stephen Merchant who seems to alone save the midpoint of the film from treading water. And an excellent blink and you miss it cameo from Karl Pilkington,

    In all a good film worth watching is if it's on cable, but you can't help but wonder if Gervais is trying to live up to an impossible standard
  • When I first saw the trailer for this movie.. I didn't think it would be that good.. It looked slightly drab and it just didn't grab my attention. However, I thought I'd give it shot as I'm a massive Gervais fan.. and I'm so glad I did!!

    I have to say I loved everything about this movie.. The cast are great and the story really takes you though the motions. It has the perfect mix of drama and comedy. The characters are well developed and I'm pretty sure most people will be able to relate to at least one of them (for me it was Snork)!!

    It explores part of our human journey by expressing hope and respect for the positive values in life whilst also touching on some of the negative aspects of sheltered 70s life.

    It left me with a warm feeling in my tummy and for many it will be like a having a trip down memory lane.

    As an actor myself, I would do ANYTHING to be in a movie like this!!

    Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchants best project to date since the office!!

    I'd recommend this to everyone!!

    I loved it !!
  • Predictable but pleasant, Cemetery Junction is a fun coming-of-age film following life in a working class suburb in the 70s. Wishing to lift himself out of a dead-end future sneered at by those he wishes to be his peers, the lead enters a new life with his old friends, with a romantic twist thrown in for good measure.

    Probably not the most original film ever, but the cast is good, the plot is simple but interesting enough throughout, there are frequent breaks of levity, and satisfying arcs for all the main characters to make it an easy-to-watch, enjoyable film with a great soundtrack.
  • Since the creation of The Office and Extras Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant have been recognised as two of Britain's most well known comedic talents. Gervais particularly is known as the front man and has expanded from British television, having done stand-up tours, starred in films, directed a film and was even a guess star in Alias. The two men have reunited to write and direct their first film together, which is something very different for both of them.

    Christian Cooke plays Freddie Taylor, an man in his early 20s living in the early 70s suburbs of Reading, England. Freddie wants to avoid the same life path his parents and contemporaries of leaving school at 14 and work in the local factory for the rest of their lives. He goes to work at a life insurance company run by Mr. Kendrick (Ralph Fiennes) and taught by Mike Ramsay (Matthew Goode) to be a salesman. Freddie spends his time with his close friends Bruce (Tom Hughes) and Snork (Jack Doolan) and do all the jolly things of life, drinking, fighting and trying to score with girls. But Freddie is slowly growing distance from them as they refuse to shade their childish ways. Freddie remakes a friendship with Julie (Felicity Jones), a friend of his when he was 12. She tells Freddie her passion to travel the world and he too has those thoughts embedded in his head. He becomes disillurated with everything in the suburb of Cemetery Junction.

    Gervais and Merchant are both known for their comedic talents and shown that they have a range of styles; with The Office's mockumentary style and Extras use of non-PC humour and personal humiliation. Gervais' own stand-up acts also relied on non-PC humour. But with Cemetery Junction the comedy is much more natural humour, relying on realistic, witty lines. It's a low key comedy but it is still very funny with laugh out loud moments. Gervais and Merchant do show their range as writers and not having to use post-modern comedy. The only moments when people speak about non-PC issues, e.g. race and mix-race, it was done more as a commentary and criticism of an older generation who are not as educated as their children. Gervais and Merchant also have a brilliant eye as directors. The early 70s was brought to live with amazing detail. The tone and music was perfectly fitting. This is a well-lit film, bright, happy and energetic. They showed that 70s Britain was not all doom and gloom and wanted to avoid kitchen-sink realism which is popular in British cinema.

    The two directors do not just tell a comedy story but also a effective drama, a coming-of-age story that even has some relevance today: young people deciding whether to leave their home and travel the world. Freddie and Julie symbolies these ideas and avoid being like their parents. Julie's mother (Emily Watson) offers a touching performance as a woman who has been broken down by husband, acting as an important symbol. Watson's role is small but very powerful. There are scenes which are very serious and shows that in this type of comedy that real drama is needed to give the film more heart and keep the audience hooked. Gervais and Merchant can handle dramatic material as well as comedy.

    The young cast show their talent, particularly Cooke and Hughes. They were convicting looking almost like twins showing two very different characters, with Cooke really wants to change and do something positive in his life, whilst Hughes was a man saying he wants to leave but does nothing about it and filled with anger. There are more experience actors to offer balance: as mention Watson was excellent. Fiennes and Goode both offer slimy performance as the closest thing to villains in the film. Gervais has a small role in the film and offers a good amount of non-PC humour with Anne Reid playing Freddie's Gran. Jones offered a decent performance, attempting to give Julie some heart and emotion. But her role was a little clichéd. However Doolan's character was not as believable as the dimwitted and slightly weird friend. He was not realistic in a film which is pretty down to Earth.

    The story too a little cliché, but Gervais and Merchant were able to give the film enough of an twist to keep Cemetery Junction fresh and make it a funny comedy drama.
  • The actors are great but the band scene is cooler! Why cut that ? Why a less appear?
  • gary-44420 April 2010
    Warning: Spoilers
    A deeply disappointing second feature from Ricky Gervais. As a Gervais fan, a veteran of the era, and a champion of British Films, I had high hopes for this film. They were misplaced. At the core is a lack of confidence from both Gervais and co-writer Merchant as to what the film is.

    It certainly does not succeed as a comedy. Neither I, nor anyone else, laughed. It does not work as a "kitchen sink " social drama either, the casual racism is awkward and lacks context, and the sexism is stilted. The "coming of age" theme fails. It is clichéd, hackneyed and devoid of youthful spark.

    That Gervais and Merchant don't know what to do with the story is evidenced by the fact that it feels like a long 95 minutes too, even though it is about the ideal running time for a film. As for the location, it is supposed to be 70's Reading, it could be anywhere. It has little sense of place. The opening shot has a London Red Double Decker bus ( they were not red in Reading, but it fits for an American release) wending its way along the high street of what looks like an upmarket Oxfordshire Village, not the monochrome monotony of Reading. Some of the Council Houses have modern Upvc windows painfully evident.

    The characterisation is dreadful. We have the three young musketeers. A good looking one trying to make something of himself in an Insurance company, a good looking bad boy working in a factory, and a geeky fat kid who makes everyone else laugh – but gets the girl in the end. Bearing in mind that the plot is wafer thin, if the characterisation is not strong you are in trouble. And that is what happens here.Gervais is ineffectual in his fatherly acting role, insurance hot-shot Ralph Fiennes is hopelessly miscast.

    An inspired sound- track makes the 90 minutes slightly less painful, but the song selections add nothing to the film itself. The language does not feel authentic and the attitudes and social mores are more 1950's than 1970's. Apart from the music, deciding when this was set would be difficult. A horrible misfire.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Clichés abound in "Cemetery Junction", a wholly generic "coming of age" movie, written and directed by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant, two big name comedians in Britain.

    Aside from several gross-out gags and moments of crude humour, the plot is pure formula, the audience watching as a group of friends attempt to escape the dreary confines of small town Britain. Of course, like "American Graffiti", the one kid who has his heart set on staying in town and getting a "proper job" (the film rightfully despises post 60s white collar Britain), ends up leaving and going on an "artistic adventure", whilst the bad boys and likable losers, all of whom previously looked ready to take on the world, remain stuck behind. If you've seen "American Graffiti", "The Education of Charlie Banks", "The Last Detail", "Scent of a Woman", "Bad Influence", "Starter For Ten", "The Wanderers" etc, you've already seen this movie. Ironic that most movies which advocate "non conformity", "sticking it to the man" and "being yourself" are so drearily formulaic.

    Still, Gervais and Merchant insert some good jokes here and there and the film is fast and slick enough to overcome its clichés. Like most films made in Britain, "Cemetery Junction" uses every trick it can to make England seem bright, sunny and cheery. Here we see Gervais and Merchant overusing colour correction and straining to shoot on sunny days. The film is ashamed of itself, trying to capture the more marketable, sun-kissed tone of LA.

    7/10 – Worth one viewing.
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