The Boy in the Dress

2014
6.4| 1h2m| en
Details

Dennis feels different - an ordinary boy in an ordinary house in an ordinary street, playing football with his mates and living with his dad and brother, but frustrated by the boring grey world he inhabits. Life has never really been the same since his mum left. However, transformation can happen in the most unexpected places. Aided by Lisa, the coolest girl in the school, Dennis creates a whole new persona and puts it to the ultimate test - but can a boy wear a dress, and what will the headmaster, his dad and his friends on the football team think if they find out?

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Reviews

Executscan Expected more
ChanFamous I wanted to like it more than I actually did... But much of the humor totally escaped me and I walked out only mildly impressed.
Catangro After playing with our expectations, this turns out to be a very different sort of film.
Hadrina The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Prismark10 Based on David Walliams children's book, The Boy in the Dress is a film with a subversive message about the celebration of diversity.Young Dennis is an ordinary schoolboy in an ordinary house in an ordinary street. Apart from the fact that his mum left them leaving his dad to raise Dennis and his brother single handedly.Dennis is good at football although the school captain does not appreciate his sporting skills. However Dennis likes fashion, haute couture. He buys fashion magazines as it brings colour to his life.Helped by Lisa a fellow pupil who is always in trouble at school for breaching the uniform policy. Dennis transforms to a visiting french pupil, Denise as he shows up to school in a dress and turns head.However it is not long before Denise is exposed at school, the strict headmaster is less than pleased with his shenanigans and gross breach of the school uniform policy.The Boy in the Dress is a pleasant whimsical film, with many trademark plot points that we have now come to expect from David Walliams adaptations. Some grotesque characters such as the headmaster, Raj the shopkeeper and a father who is doing his best but all at sea being a single father.
studioAT Adaptations of the children's books by David Walliams have become a sort of fixture of the Christmas TV schedules, and this was the third of these.I enjoyed the first one 'Mr Stink', but I found this one to be a little dull if I'm honest. It has its moments, and the message behind it is good, but I didn't find the cast to be as full of big names as previous adaptations, and crucially for only an hour film, it dragged.The lad playing Dennis does well and he is ably supported by the always fun James Buckley as a PE teacher and Harish Patel as Raj. I didn't find Jennifer Saunders role particularly funny at all though.It is a well made adaptation though, and well worth watching on DVD.
Jackson Booth-Millard I had heard all about the children's books and probably seen them in the shops a few times, and I was definitely interested to see another screen adaptation of the story created and written by comedian David Walliams, and Christmas was the suitable time for it to be broadcast. Basically twelve-year-old Dennis (Billy Kennedy) attends a school that has a very strict dress code, he is the football team's key striker, but he feels out of place and misses his glamorous mother who walked out on the family and left him estranged from his father. Dennis befriends free-spirited school- mate Lisa (Temi Orelaja) after becoming attracted to a fashion magazine, his new friend is a talented would- be dress designer, she persuades Dennis to model a new dress she makes. Initially Dennis feels awkward modelling in a women's dress, but he finds an interest in cross-dressing, using it as his own form of rebellion are wearing it to school, wearing makeup to him unrecognisable and passing himself off a French exchange student. However Dennis is exposed and humiliated, the stony headmaster Mr. Hawthorn (Tim McInnerny) expels him and the football looks doomed in a cup final against a superior team. But Lisa has an idea and Dennis's whole football team show their support by dressing in women's clothing themselves, going against the headmaster, telling him to expel them all if Dennis cannot play in the match. In the end, Dennis helps to win the football match and the cup, he is declared a hero, reunited with his father, and his expelling is overturned when the headmaster is exposed to having his own guilty secret. Also starring Felicity Montagu as Miss Price, Jennifer Saunders as Miss Windsor, Aaron Chawla as Darvesh, Meera Syal as Jaspreet, Oliver Barry-Brook as John, Big School's Steve Speirs as Peter, Emma Cooke as Mum, Keith Lemon: The Film's Harish Patel as Raj, Kate Moss, The Inbetweeners' James Buckley as Mr. Norris, David Walliams as Referee and Gary Lineker. The cast are all well suited, Kenney as the title character especially, it is a simple and sweet story about how being different is not always a bad thing, children and adults alike will enjoy this fun family comedy drama. Good!
Neil Welch Young Dennis has discovered that he likes wearing dresses. This makes him an object of ridicule at school and elsewhere.Based on a children's book by actor David Walliams (whose own proclivities for dressing in womens clothing are well recorded), this is a rather subversive story pitched at questioning the easy acceptance of gender stereotyping - or, perhaps more accurately, the too-ready denial of anything which challenges such stereotyping. As such, it is something of a surprise to find this surfacing as a family film on TV in the middle of the holiday season.But it is good. It is bright, cheerful, very funny, and delivers a worthwhile lesson without overstating its case.I recommend it.