Bright Young Things review

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With the gong-grabbing glitz of Chicago still hoofing across the memory bank, another dose of '20s scandal, celebrity and satire may not seem like a fresh proposition. Fear not: flawed it may be, but the directorial bow of Stephen Fry - actor, author, BAFTA host supreme - is far from stale.

Bright Young Things is Fry's self-penned adap of Vile Bodies, Evelyn Waugh's 1930 poke at posh London's elegant wasters. The sunny-side-up title flip is significant, since the film nails the silliness of its characters' world, but doesn't quite pin down the cynicism. Yes, there's a sobering sense of decline and fall as the narrative path winds its way inexorably towards the Second World War. But things never get so dark that you can't see the happy ending lying ahead.

There's a whiff of crowd-pleasing compromise around its latter parts, but Stephen Fry's bellow into the megaphone is frisky and well-acted, suggesting brighter things to come.

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