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Boogie Woogie
Directed by
Duncan Ward
R
2009
1h 34m
Comedy
,
Drama
5.1
32%
22%
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A comedy of manners set against the backdrop of contemporary London and the international art scene.
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Where to Watch Boogie Woogie
The Roku Channel
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AMC+
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Cast of Boogie Woogie
Gillian Anderson
Jean Maclestone
Alan Cumming
Dewey Dalamanatousis
Heather Graham
Beth Freemantle
Danny Huston
Art Spindle
Jack Huston
Jo Richards
Christopher Lee
Mr. Alfred Rhinegold
Joanna Lumley
Mrs. Alfreda Rhinegold
Simon McBurney
Robert Freign
Meredith Ostrom
Joany
Charlotte Rampling
Emille
Amanda Seyfried
Paige Prideaux
Stellan Skarsgård
Bob Maclestone
Jaime Winstone
Elaine
Alfie Allen
Photographer
Gemma Atkinson
Charlotte Bailey
Silas Carson
Surgeon
Sidney Cole
Taxi Driver
Sergio James
Alphonse (Maitre D')
Michael Culkin
Beth's Father
Joséphine de la Baume
Frenchie
Alma Eno
Elaine's Friend
Michael Estorick
Rabbi
Rosie Fellner
Rachel Leighton
Stephen Greif
Bob's Lawyer
Maria Papas
Waitress
Jenny Runacre
Mrs. Havermeyer
Ebe Sievwright
Assistant Surgeon
Jan Uddin
Art's Partner
Boogie Woogie Ratings & Reviews
Tiny Mix Tapes
Derek Smith
I don't begrudge Boogie Woogie's attacks on the art scene for its pretension, greed, and self-aggrandizement run rampant; I begrudge the fact that the film is guilty of these very same things.
New York Post
Lou Lumenick
Goes over the top now and then, but overall it's a lot of nasty fun.
New York Times
Stephen Holden
[The film's characters] are so repellent that almost everyone outside the movie's fetid hothouse will want to flee to fresher air.
AV Club
Sam Adams
The cast of superficial backstabbers, casual philanderers, and gibberish-spouting phonies has no original characters, but at least a few of the actors attack their roles with a zest that offsets their two-dimensionality.
NYC Movie Guru
Avi Offer
Overstuffed and occasionally meandering while boasting a terrific ensemble cast and a radiant, brave performance by Gillian Anderson. It's an unflinchingly honest, provocative potpourri of the harsh realities of the art world.
BrianOrndorf.com
Brian Orndorf
More of a paper cut, but one that's sufficiently nasty in a minor key, landing a few body blows where it matters the most, while successfully detailing the betrayal and schmoozing it takes to get to the top.
Back Stage
Pete Hammond
Faux Altman sexual wallow in which a lot of fine actors are wasted on pretentious mumbo jumbo.
Eye for Film
Amber Wilkinson
Less the free-form, jazzy ensemble satire on the art world it aspires to be than an over-elaborate and under-funny undertaking by high quality actors who should know better.
About.com
Marcy Dermansky
The film cannot sustain the giddy, fast pace that sets it off.
Boxoffice Magazine
Steve Ramos
May be the most well connected comedy in years-although many of the artists featured will probably experience remorse after watching the haphazard results.
Slant Magazine
Nick Schager
Hate mail for the hoity-toity art world, Boogie Woogie demonstrates the same mercy to its milieu that a flesh-eater might show a fresh carcass.
Variety
Leslie Felperin
Boogie Woogie delivers little more than a lukewarm spoof.
Observer
Rex Reed
A tepid spoof that only occasionally evokes a reluctant smile.
Village Voice
Aaron Hillis
Director Duncan Ward tries way too hard to nail a way too easy target in his sub-Altman ensemble spoof of the overpriced, overhyped, overly pretentious modern-art scene.
NewsBlaze
Prairie Miller
Devilishly cynical eavesdropper art snob fare peering into the pretentious when not cruel machinations transpiring in the world of creative merchandise commerce.
Miss FlickChick
Maitland McDonagh
The art-world satire Boogie Woogie is a monumental piece of squandered potential, arch but not witty, mean without being perceptive, its most outrageous shocks little more than static sparks.
Film Journal International
Doris Toumarkine
This deliciously perverse, splashy, lively collage of the high-end contemporary London art scene provides a guilty pleasure to students of sex, greed and manipulation. Aesthetics is beside the point.
Movieline
Michelle Orange
Neither a wholly realized satire or a successfully drawn ensemble piece, Boogie Woogie's got the moves but can't quite find the beat.
New York Press
Armond White
Director Duncan Ward laggardly paces Danny Moynihan's script. This doesn't help what might well be an accurate portrayal of bourgeois decadence -- especially when Ward is given to lecherous emphasis while emphasizing his characters' lechery.
Deep Focus Review
Brian Eggert
Sometimes being brash and tasteless is exactly what makes great satire, except the outcome here is too drastic and obvious to be considered any kind of success.
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