British humor can be very deceptive. You have the outright nonsense of the Monty Python crew, and then you have the biting witticism of a screenplay as is found in "Withnail and I". It's difficult to say whether you can enjoy a film like this or not; it's just a bit too dark and seamy for entertainment purposes, but it finds it's rewards in other ways. There's a sense of rambling about with the story line, introducing deficient characters along the way to complement the antics of Withnail (Richard E. Grant) and friend Marwood (Paul McGann), the celebrated 'and I' of the picture. For a couple of characters having to operate from the wrong side of the tracks, their fate is virtually all down hill from there, thereby counterpointing the understated humor with a very real sense of sadness and melancholy. The pacing of the film may be somewhat slow and tedious for some viewers, not to mention the paucity of a plot, but for those with the patience, this is a movie that satisfies the discriminating viewer with it's prescient dialog and incorrigible wit.
Plot summary
Two out-of-work actors -- the anxious, luckless Marwood and his acerbic, alcoholic friend, Withnail -- spend their days drifting between their squalid flat, the unemployment office and the pub. When they take a holiday "by mistake" at the country house of Withnail's flamboyantly gay uncle, Monty, they encounter the unpleasant side of the English countryside: tedium, terrifying locals and torrential rain.
Uploaded by: OTTO
October 29, 2014 at 01:26 PM
Director
Top cast
Movie Reviews
"We are not drunks. We are multi-millionaires!"
Brilliant Brit Comedy
Strange to believe that WITHNAIL AND I , a film that is regarded as today one of the best British comedies ever made flopped spectacularly on its initial release in 1987 and maybe it's not too easy to see why . In the late 1980s the British film industry was in an absolute mire and the very phrase itself " British film " made a homegrown audience roll its eyes and think of art-house crap directed by Derek Jarman or Peter Greenaway . Any British film no matter the genre or how good it was always got tarred with the same brush in those days .
Years later actor Ralph Brown ( Danny ) was asked " Why is it a good film ? " to which he replied " Because there's no crap bits in it " which simplifying the truth . WITHNAIL AND I is a very rare type of British comedy since it has been developed to its utmost potential . All too often British comedies of the last 20 years feel like they've been rush released before the script has been used to its full potential but not with this comedy classic because nearly every scene couldn't possibly be any funnier . Everyone has their favourite scene like the one in the Irish bar or the tea room or the one with bull but for me the stand out scene has got to be the urine sample down at the police station . It's also interesting to note that it's a movie without any female characters and feels both homo-erotic and laddish at the same time . It also carries an emotional and poignant impact at the end , something all of us can relate to when our best friend finds a new best friend and we become quickly forgotten
All the cast are excellent but Richard E Grant is nothing short of superb and it's probably his performance as much as Bruce Robinson's smart script . You could argue that because Withnail is a camp , self centered , mincing thespian Grant is playing an extension of himself and while this may be true he's certainly enjoyable to watch here . Ironically enough I'd have thought he'd be brilliant as the title character in DOCTOR WHO but it was co-star Paul McGann who got the role in the 1996 American TVM and what a major disappointment he was . As it stands both actors will probably be best remembered for their cracking roles in this movie