
If you don't remember the 60s don't worry, neither can they.
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.
- 7.3
- 1987
- Released
- 1h 48m

Richard E. Grant
Withnail
Paul McGann
...& I
Richard Griffiths
Monty
Ralph Brown
Danny
Michael Elphick
Jake
Daragh O'Malley
Irishman
Michael Wardle
Isaac Parkin
Una Brandon-Jones
Mrs. Parkin
Noel Johnson
General
Irene Sutcliffe
Waitress
Llewellyn Rees
Tea Shop Proprietor
Robert Oates
Policeman 1
Anthony Wise
Policeman 2
Eddie Tagoe
Presuming Ed








Released
en
$1,544,889.00
- #drug dealer
- #london, england
- #northern england
- #countryside
- #alcohol
- #darkness
- #flat
- #bath
- #dark comedy
- #uncle
- #cigar smoking
- #cannabis
- #money
- #rural area
- #cottage
- #poverty
- #cafe
- #strangulation
- #drugs
- #buddy
- #alcohol abuse
- #farmer
- #british pub
- #buddy comedy
- #unemployed
- #1960s
- #gay theme
Reviews

Just what exactly was it lurking in the sink? Probably best not to know as we meet the dipso "Withnail" (Richard E. Grant) and his marginally more respectable pal who'd be the "Marwood/I" (Paul McGann). Two "resting" actors who haven't tuppence to rub together. A visit to his gay uncle "Monty" (Richard Grffiths) provides them with some fine wine and with the key to his remote country cottage where

**It's a good film, but it's very damaged by the abuse of alcohol, drugs and tobacco, and by the weakness of the script, in terms of narrative.** I expected a lot more from this movie, I have to confess. It is considered by many to be one of the best British comic films, and there is no doubt that the dialogues and situations were extremely funny, and it is not difficult to laugh at the absurd

A beautiful, dreary and funny film. At times subtle and others direct. Deeply contemplative with majestic scenery and an atmosphere of grey. Sardonic humour with believable, excellently acted characters and scenarios. It's the greatest film about friendship and only gets better with each viewing. The direction is purely cinematic and shows rather than tells. A Masterpiece.
Bought this on DVD for a £2 on a second-hand market stall a couple of years ago, then upgraded it to blu-ray a few months ago when I saw it on sale in HMV for a bargaintastic three quid. Yet I'd never got around to actually watching it. I'd bought it (twice) off the back of it being this enormous cult classic weighed down with critical praise (Wiki tells me that the readers of Total Film magazine











