The Full Monty is a 1997 Britishcomedy film directed byPeter Cattaneo, written bySimon Beaufoy, and starringRobert Carlyle,Tom Wilkinson andMark Addy. The film is set inSheffield in theNorth of England during the 1990s, and tells the story of six unemployed men, four of them former steel workers, who decide to form a malestriptease act (à laChippendale dancers) in order to make some money and for the main character, Gaz, to be able to see his son. Gaz declares that their show will be much better than the Chippendales because they will go "the full monty"—strip all the way.
In the mid-1990s, the once-successful steel mills ofSheffield,South Yorkshire have shut down and most of the workers have beenmade redundant. Former steelworkers Gary "Gaz" Schofield and Dave Horsfall resort to stealing scrap metal from the abandoned mills and selling it to make money, taking Gaz's son Nathan with them for assistance, but a security guard keeps surprising them and locking them inside the mill.
Gaz is facing trouble from his former wife Mandy and her boyfriend Barry overchild support payments that he cannot pay since losing his job. Nathan lives with Mandy and Barry but Gaz has joint custody of him with Mandy. Mandy is seeking a court ruling giving her sole custody of Nathan.
One day, Gaz spots a crowd of women lined up outside a club to see aChippendales'striptease act, and is inspired to form his own striptease group using local men, hoping to make enough money to pay off his child support obligations. The first to join the group is Lomper, a security guard at the mill where Dave and Gaz once worked, whose suicide attempt they interrupt. Next, they recruit Gerald Cooper, their former foreman, who is hiding his unemployment from his wife. Gaz and Dave see Gerald and his wife, Linda, at a dance class, and recruit him to teach them some moves.
Looking for more recruits, the four men hold an open audition and settle on Horse, an older man who is a good dancer, and Guy, who cannot dance but proves to be unusually well-endowed. The six men begin to practise their act. Gaz then learns that he has to pay a £100 deposit to secure the club for the night. He cannot afford this, but Nathan gets the money out of his savings, saying that he trusts Gaz to repay him. When they are greeted by two women while putting up posters for the show, Gaz boasts that they are better than the real Chippendales because they go "thefull monty". Dave, struggling with his body image, drops out and finds a job as a security guard atAsda. The others publicly rehearse at the mill for some female relatives of Horse, but a passing policeman catches them mid-show, and Gaz, Gerald and Horse are arrested for indecent exposure, costing Gaz the right to see Nathan. Lomper and Guy escape to Lomper's house and start a relationship.
Gerald is thrown out by Linda afterbailiffs arrive at their house and seize their belongings to pay Gerald's debts, resulting in him having to stay with Gaz. Later Gaz goes to Asda and asks Dave if he could "borrow" a jacket for Lomper's mother's funeral. Dave agrees and also decides to quit his security job. They steal two suit jackets and go to the funeral.
Soon, the group find that the act and their arrest has popularised them. They agree to forgo the plan, until Gaz learns that the show is sold out. He convinces the others to do it just for one night only. Initially Dave still refuses, but regains his confidence after encouragement from his wife, Jean, and joins the rest of the group minutes before they go on stage. Nathan also arrives with Dave, having secretly come along, and tells Gaz that Mandy is there, but she would not let Barry go with her.
Gaz refuses to do the act because there are men in the audience (including the police officers who watched the footage of the security camera's recording of them earlier), when the posters were supposed to say it was for women only. The other five are starting the act when Nathan orders Gaz to go out on stage. Gaz, proud of his son, joins the others and performs in front of the audience and Mandy, who seems to see him in a new light. Their act is a success.
Channel 4 Films paid for the screenplay to be written but then declined to invest any equity in the film.Fox Searchlight ended up financing it for almost £3 million.[3]
The famous "Hot Stuff" scene, in which the characters dance in the queue at theJobcentre,[4] was originally going to be cut from the final production as it was considered "too unrealistic".[5]
The cast allegedly agreed that all six of them would really do the "full monty" strip at the end in front of 50 extras, provided they had to do only one take.[6] Hugo Speer toldThe Guardian in 2019: "The climactic scene was nuts. It was in a very cold working men's club, starting at about midday. The makeup and costume girls knew how we were feeling, so they were thrusting glasses of alcohol into our hands between takes. The extras had smuggled in booze, too. They weren't aware we were going to go all the way – that was a bit of smarts on the producers' part, so it was a completely natural reaction they got at the end."[3]
The production and shooting was also said to be very challenging, with Robert Carlyle saying: "The Full Monty was a tough shoot, it really really was. Horrible."[7]
The opening sequence of the Sheffield promotion film from 1972 is taken fromCity on the Move, a film commissioned by Peter Wigley, Sheffield's first ever publicity officer, to convince people that Sheffield was a centre for tourism and commerce.City on the Move was produced and directed by Jim and Marie-Luise Coulthard and showed a modern thriving city that was rapidly developing thanks to the successful steel industry in Sheffield. However, the film went virtually unnoticed until the Coulthards were approached about some of the footage being included inThe Full Monty for a payment of £400, which they accepted. In 2008,City on the Move was released on DVD under the new nameThe Reel Monty.[9]
The film features frequent use of Britishslang, and in particularSheffielder dialect.
The film's title is a phrase generally used in the United Kingdom to mean "the whole lot", or "the whole hog"; in the film, the characters use it to refer to full nudity — as Horse says, "No one said anything to me about the full monty!" The phrase, whose origin is obscure (a possible meaning relates to a full 3-piece suit by the then popular high street tailor Montague Burton), gained a renewed prominence in British culture following the film.
Other dialect words are used in the film; some such asnesh (meaning a person unusually susceptible to cold) are widespread across theNorth Midlands region.Jennel (analley) is local to Sheffield:[10] it is a variation on the word "ginnel", which is in full versions of theOxford English Dictionary and is used in many parts of England.
The film surprised critics when it was first released, earning near-universal acclaim, and it went on to be nominated for theAcademy Award for Best Picture.
Writing inTime Out New York regarding the implications of the filmAndrew Johnston stated: "Monty is much less ribald than it sounds. The funniest moments are frequently the most subtle, like when five of the strippers, standing in the dole line, find themselves unable to resist dancing in place when Donna Summers's "Hot Stuff" comes on the radio. There's surprisingly little raunch, in part because the film can't stop thinking of women as enemies of a sort (at leastMonty is less offensive thanBrassed Off in that department). And refreshingly, its definition of male bonding is broad enough to let two of the lads find love in each other's arms."[11]
Review aggregateRotten Tomatoes retrospectively reports that 96% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 55 reviews, with an average score of 7.50/10. The consensus reads, "Cheeky and infectiously good-natured,The Full Monty bares its big beating heart with a sly dose of ribald comedy."[12] OnMetacritic, which assesses films with a score out of 100, the film has a score of 75 based on 31 critics' reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[13]
The Full Monty opened on six screens in the United States on 13 August 1997 and grossed $244,375 in its first five days, with a per-screen average in its opening weekend of $29,430; the highest for a film that weekend.[2] The film expanded to 10 screens the following weekend and then 36 screens for the Labor Day weekend (29 August – 1 September) where it remained the film with the highest per-screen average gross ($25,344) and grossed a total of $1.7 million in its first 20 days.[2][14] When the film was released in theUnited Kingdom on 29 August 1997 on 224 screens, it grossed £1,593,928 in its first 3 days, ranking second at the UK box office behindMen in Black, which grossed £1.7 million in its fifth week of release from almost twice the number of screens (411).[15] However, it beatMen in Black for the week and took the weekend crown the following weekend and remainednumber one at the UK box office for the next nine weeks, the longest a film had remained at number one in the UK.[16][17][18] It became the highest-grossing British film of all time in its ninth week of release, surpassingFour Weddings and a Funeral.[19] It was displaced as the weekend number one byFace/Off but remained the highest grosser for the week and returned to spend the next two weekends back at number one.[18][20][21] It was the highest-grossing film in the UK for thirteen consecutive weeks and eleven weekends.[22] In the US, it expanded to 387 screens on 12 September and grossed $2.9 million for the weekend to finish in fifth place at the box office. It expanded further to 650 screens the following weekend where it retained its fifth place.[2]
It also opened atnumber one in Australia where it remained for five weeks. In France, it opened at the same time asThe Lost World: Jurassic Park and recorded a per screen average of $16,699 compared to the former's $19,133, finishing in third place for the week.[23][24][25][26] On 27 January 1998, it surpassedJurassic Park to become thehighest-grossing film in the UK and finished with a gross of £52.2 million ($85 million).[27][28][2] In the United States and Canada it finished its run with a gross of $46 million. It grossed $127 million in other international markets for a worldwide gross of $258 million.[2]
In 1999, it was ranked #25 on theBFI Top 100 British films list. In 2000, readers ofTotal Film magazine votedThe Full Monty the 49th greatest comedy film of all time. By that year it earned an estimated £194 million at the box office worldwide.[29]
New Zealand playwrightsAnthony McCarten andStephen Sinclair filed a £180 millionlawsuit against the producers ofThe Full Monty in 1998.[30] They claim that the film blatantly infringed on their play,Ladies Night, which toured both Britain and New Zealand.[31][32] Anthony McCarten and Stephen Sinclair created a website containing their play in response to statements from the producers ofThe Full Monty that claimed the two productions were not alike. The underlying rights were attributed to co-producer, Paul Bucknor, and the lawsuit was settled out of court; as part of the agreement, the website containingLadies Night was shut down.[33]
Anne Dudley's Oscar for Best Score was a surprise, and some critics felt undeserved, inasmuch as the award is for original music and most of the film's memorable moments had jukebox favourites playing.[34][35][36] Dudley composed "about 20 minutes' worth of music" for the film.[37] Bob Strauss called the Oscar "well-deserved",[38] while Pauline Reay felt Dudley's underscore complemented the familiar hits.[39] Dudley described her score toSteven Poole:[40]
It was this conglomeration of sounds—baritone sax,acoustic guitar,harmonica [...] The reasoning was that all these six men are different, they come from different backgrounds, but in the final scene it all works. The idea was that the instruments should do that as well—they all come from different places but they actually gel...
The Full Monty: Music from the Motion Picture Soundtrack
The albumThe Full Monty: Music from the Motion Picture Soundtrack includes two original tracks by Dudley plus the pop hits, including a cover byTom Jones of "You Can Leave Your Hat On" commissioned and produced by Dudley, who had collaborated with Jones ona 1988 cover of "Kiss".[37][41]
However, despite positive reviews, the show closed on 29 March, rather than the planned 14 June, after a run of just over a month.[47] A Portuguese-language version was adapted for theatrical performance in Brazil by Brazilian journalist Artur Xexéo. This version of the play was directed by Tadeu Aguiar, and debuted in Brazil on 6 October 2015.[48]
In 2023,FX on Hulu andDisney+ released a limited television series based on the film. The series is produced bySearchlight Television,FXP and Little Island Productions. Simon Beaufoy is credited as creator, writer and executive producer. The original cast members, including Carlyle, Wilkinson, and Addy, reprised their roles.[56][57][58] On 2 July 2022, Speer was removed from the series due to inappropriate conduct claims.[59] The series premiered on 14 June 2023.[60]
^Bona, Damien (6 February 2002).Inside Oscar 2. Random House Publishing Group. p. 306.ISBN9780345448002. Retrieved27 November 2014.the Oscar to Anne Dudley forThe Full Monty ... was somewhat surprising, since the music most remembered from the film was ... disco hits"
^Dyja, Eddie (2010).Studying British Cinema, the 1990s. Columbia University Press. p. 106.ISBN9781906733025.Tom Jones ... recorded it especially for the film