Billy Elliot

Inside every one of us is a special talent waiting to come out. The trick is finding it.

7.6
20001h 51m

County Durham, England, 1984. The miners' strike has started and the police have started coming up from Bethnal Green, starting a class war with the lower classes suffering. Caught in the middle of the conflict is 11-year old Billy Elliot, who, after leaving his boxing club for the day, stumbles upon a ballet class and finds out that he's naturally talented. He practices with his teacher Mrs. Wilkinson for an upcoming audition in Newcastle-upon Tyne for the royal Ballet school in London.

Production

Logo for StudioCanal
Logo for BBC Film
Logo for Tiger Aspect

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: 20th Anniversary Official Trailer

20th Anniversary Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Billy Elliot Trailer

Billy Elliot Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Billy Elliot ≣ 2000 ≣ Trailer ≣ Remastered

Billy Elliot ≣ 2000 ≣ Trailer ≣ Remastered

Thumbnail for video: 14 year old Jamie Bell wins Leading Actor BAFTA in 2001

14 year old Jamie Bell wins Leading Actor BAFTA in 2001

Thumbnail for video: BILLY ELLIOT FINAL SCENE

BILLY ELLIOT FINAL SCENE

Thumbnail for video: Billy Elliot (2000) - Trailer

Billy Elliot (2000) - Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Billy Elliot (6/12) Movie CLIP - You're Not Concentrating (2000) HD

Billy Elliot (6/12) Movie CLIP - You're Not Concentrating (2000) HD

Thumbnail for video: Billy Elliot (11/12) Movie CLIP - Acceptance (2000) HD

Billy Elliot (11/12) Movie CLIP - Acceptance (2000) HD

Thumbnail for video: Billy Elliot (5/12) Movie CLIP - Private Lessons (2000) HD

Billy Elliot (5/12) Movie CLIP - Private Lessons (2000) HD

Thumbnail for video: Billy Elliot (10/12) Movie CLIP - What Dancing Feels Like (2000) HD

Billy Elliot (10/12) Movie CLIP - What Dancing Feels Like (2000) HD

Cast

Photo of Jamie Bell

Jamie Bell

Billy Elliot

Photo of Gary Lewis

Gary Lewis

Jackie Elliot

Photo of Julie Walters

Julie Walters

Mrs Wilkinson

Photo of Jamie Draven

Jamie Draven

Tony Elliot

Photo of Stuart Wells

Stuart Wells

Michael Caffrey

Photo of Mike Elliot

Mike Elliot

George Watson

Photo of Joe Renton

Joe Renton

Gary Poulson

Photo of Janine Birkett

Janine Birkett

Billy's mother

Photo of Trevor Fox

Trevor Fox

PC Jeff Peverly

Photo of Charlie Hardwick

Charlie Hardwick

Sheila Briggs

Photo of Stephen Mangan

Stephen Mangan

Ballet Doctor

Photo of Paul Ridley

Paul Ridley

Tutor in Medical

Photo of Barbara Leigh-Hunt

Barbara Leigh-Hunt

Vice-Principal

Photo of Diana Kent

Diana Kent

Tutor 2

Photo of Neil North

Neil North

Tutor 3

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

8/10

I hadn't seen this film since it was released when it was shown recently as a part of the Glasgow Youth Film Festival. The fact that it was chosen by the kids of today in what would have been just as unlikely a setting for this film as the North of England speaks volumes as to it's effect on challenging and breaking the stereotypical moulds that the British working class in the early 1980s was steeped in. The sylph-like "Billy" (the hugely engaging Jamie Bell) goes to boxing class each week but is soon more preoccupied by the adjacent dancing class of the no-nonsense "Mrs. Wilkinson" (Julie Walters) who gradually lets him join in. He's a bit scared that his dad (Gary Lewis) and his wayward brother "Tony" (Jamie Draven) will find out so it has to all be a bit clandestine. It's only when his striking miner father finds out from the boxing coach that "Billy" is spending his 50p elsewhere that a confrontation ensues and the film steps up a gear. The characterisations are strong and are not frightened to evolve - but not in a simplistic A+B=C fashion. There are troubles and traumas - not least those faced by a father who struggles with his own emotions; is facing financial difficulties, a wayward older son and a younger one who wants to dance and hangs about with best pal "Michael" (another strong effort from Stuart Wells) who is quite clearly gay. Walters and Bell and Bell and Lewis work well together here; allowing the story to emerge naturally and energetically and as feel-good films go, this takes some beating. It's the ultimate "anyone can do" film that resonates as well now as it did then - only, maybe, the soundtrack needs a bit of updating! Great film this - and there's even a tiny bit of Adam Cooper at the end.

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