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  1. The Riot Club. The Riot Club is a 2014 British thriller drama film directed by Lone Scherfig and written by Laura Wade, based on Wade's 2010 play Posh. [2] The film stars Sam Claflin, Max Irons and Douglas Booth. [3] It is set among the Riot Club, a fictional all-male, exclusive dining club at the University of Oxford.

  2. The film The Riot Club (2014) directed by Lone Scherfig tells the story of the Riot Club, an undergraduate dining society for elite Oxford University students. The film follows how the lives of two first-year students – Miles and Alistair – are changed because of their connection with the Riot Club.

  3. Mar 27, 2015 · Drama, Thriller. R. 1h 47m. By Stephen Holden. March 26, 2015. “ The Riot Club ,” a poisonous satire of Britain’s upper class, adapted from Laura Wade’s play “Posh,” may puncture any ...

    • Stephen Holden
    • 2 min
    • Lone Scherfig
  4. Sep 18, 2014 · Arts and entertainment correspondent, BBC News. Based on Laura Wade's hit stage play Posh, The Riot Club tells the story of 10 Oxford students who gather at a country pub for a night of...

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    • who are the two students in the riot club full book read2
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  6. Mar 27, 2015 · Max Irons (son of Jeremy) gets the most memorable role as Milo Richards, a first-year student at Oxford University who is quickly drawn to two people: Lauren ( Holliday Grainger ), a beautiful fellow first-year who forms a relationship with Milo despite her lower social status economically and former Westminster schoolmate Hugo ( Sam Reid ), who...

  7. Mar 27, 2015 · The Riot Club: Directed by Lone Scherfig. With Thomas Arnold, Harry Lloyd, Amber Anderson, Max Irons. Two first-year students at Oxford University join the infamous Riot Club, where reputations can be made or destroyed over the course of a single evening.

  8. Sep 26, 2014 · It begins as a satire of classism at a top university, before adding a nebulous love story, then morphing into an ensemble drama-comedy and culminating as a tragedy. Yet none of these strands are done effectively. The satire is simplistic and juvenile, reducing the depiction of classism to a battle between accents north and south of the M25.

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