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Metropolitan

Metropolitan

  • Status: Released
  • 03-08-1990
  • Runtime: 99 min
  • Score: 6.892
  • Vote count: 166

A radical student is adopted by a group of young New Yorkers, serves as a catalyst to alter his and their lives. Gathering in a Manhattan apartment, the group of friends meet to discuss social mobility, Fourier's socialism and play bridge in their cocoon of upper-class society - until they are joined by a man with a critical view of their way of life.

Edward Clements

Tom Townsend

Chris Eigeman

Nick Smith

Taylor Nichols

Charlie Black

Carolyn Farina

Audrey Rouget

Isabel Gillies

Cynthia McLean

Dylan Hundley

Sally Fowler

Allison Parisi

Jane Clarke

Bryan Leder

Fred Neff

Will Kempe

Rick Von Sloneker

Ellia Thompson

Serena Slocum

Stephen Uys

Victor Lemley

Roger W. Kirby

Man at Bar

Alice Connorton

Mrs. Townsend

Linda Gillies

Mrs. Rouget

John Lynch

Allen Green

Donal Lardner Ward

North Greenwich Preppie

Thomas R. Voth

Cab Driver

Caroline Bennett

Sabina - Texas Deb

Francis Creighton

Cadet Frawley

Joel S. Schreiber

A.T. Harris Salesman

Catherine Atzen

Catherine Atzen Clinician

J. Harden Rose

TV Voice of Debutante Ball (voice)

griggs79

Whit Stillman’s _Metropolitan_ offers a witty and arch glimpse into the lives of Upper East Side debutantes and their slightly aimless escorts during Christmas break. It's like _The Breakfast Club_, but with black-tie soirées instead of detention and ironic detachment and spirited Jane Austen debates instead of teen angst. The film's charm is sure to intrigue you. The film’s champagne fizz and sharp repartee conceal a darker undercurrent. Characters like the sardonic Nick, a disillusioned heir to a fortune, and brooding Charlie, a struggling artist from a wealthy family, exude a cool cynicism that hints at Patrick Bateman-esque disaffection, making one wonder if Brett Easton Ellis found inspiration here for _American Psycho’s_ chilling socialites. While some scenes flirt with overindulgence, _Metropolitan_ still cuts through with moments of incisive charm. Its privileged protagonists may test patience, but their quirks make them hard to look away from.