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Mike Leigh may well be Britain's greatest living film director; his worldview has permeated our national consciousness. This book gives detailed readings of the nine feature films he has made for the cinema, as well as an overview of his work for television. Written with the co-operation of Leigh himself, it challenges the critical privileging of realism in histories of British cinema, placing the emphasis instead on the importance of comedy and humour: of jokes and their functions; of laughter as a survival mechanism; and of characterisations and situations that disrupt our preconceptions of ‘realism’. Striving for the all-important quality of truth in everything he does, Leigh has consistently shown how ordinary lives are too complex to fit snugly into the conventions of narrative art. From the bittersweet observation of Life is Sweet or Secrets and Lies, to the blistering satire of Naked and the manifest compassion of Vera Drake, he has demonstrated a matchless ability to perceive life's funny side as well as its tragedies.
‘Out of the kindness of her heart’: Vera Drake 11 Leigh’s second cinematic venture into period drama was in a sense closer to home than Topsy-Turvy, being set within living memory for a substantial proportion of a 2004 audience; and dealing with a subject about which it is virtually impossible to remain neutral. In its way, it was clearly as personal a project as the earlier film, too: its dedication reads, ‘In loving memory of my parents, a doctor and a midwife’. The setting is London in 1950, when the Second World War still resonated in people’s memories, and
Conclusion ‘The journey continues’ This book leaves Leigh on something like the crest of a wave. The success of Vera Drake was almost immediately followed up by a triumphant return to the theatre, a medium in which he had not worked since 1993’s It’s a Great Big Shame! Still, even after an absence of twelve years, it is hard to imagine him refusing an invitation from the Royal National Theatre – although it had taken him a few years to find the time, Nicholas Hytner having asked him every year since taking over as the National’s artistic director in 2001. Hytner
Introduction: ‘You’ve gotta laugh’ Mike Leigh may well be Britain’s greatest living director. Without question, he has carved a unique niche for himself: describe a person or a situation as being like someone or something ‘out of a Mike Leigh film’, and few would fail to understand what you meant (which would probably be a small-scale domestic drama involving trapped, yet highly idiosyncratic, suburban characters). And yet, when his most recent film Vera Drake was released in 2005, thirty-four years after his debut feature, Peter Bradshaw was able to claim in a
continuing misconception that they are: all the improvisation occurs in the preparation and rehearsal. (There are, of course, occasional onset amendments and suggestions, but no more than in the shooting of most other films.) What he does do is enhance the authenticity of the performances by giving the actors no more information than their characters know: Alison Steadman, for example, was not aware that her character’s daughter suffered from bulimia until she saw a preview of Life Is Sweet; and in Vera Drake, nobody but Imelda Staunton knew in advance that her character was
relationship, as it was in Grown-Ups and will be for couples in Leigh’s future films from Life Is Sweet to Vera Drake. Ray Carney’s extended analysis of their joking and sense of play comprehensively demonstrates how Cyril and Shirley’s laughter is a sign of their humanity, their sense of self and their ability to engage with the world around them. Their behaviour is healthily, spontaneously responsive – the antithesis of the inelasticity which Bergson defines as inappropriate and therefore ridiculous. In that sense, their characterisation as a couple can be seen as a
and provide them with a past and a present. The dripping walls and poorly lit cramped spaces of Vera Drake (2004) evoke poverty, deprivation and poor sanitation. But the locations also suggest a tight-knit workingclass community and a visual evocation of the urban inner city in the 1950s, as well as the social realism popular in earlier periods of British filmmaking. Sometimes the set design is less about a naturalistic evocation of place and space and more about mood or tone. Films which are fantastical or futuristic frequently eschew set designs which evoke
ideologies of the free cinema movement of which Reisz was a founder member. The continuing influence of the British new wave and of the social realist aesthetic is evident in films as diverse as Mike Leigh’s Vera Drake (2004) and Mark Herman’s Brassed Off (1996). Film as social history Aesthetically, the film draws on older traditions in British cinema of documentary and social commentary. Dubbed ‘kitchen-sink drama’ or social realism for its engagement with issues and social concerns, the films of the new wave did not shy away from addressing issues which had previously
. Film acting in later periods – including our own – is equally codified, even if its relative economy in the deployment of both body and voice may make it more difficult to perceive its conventions. Most recent performance in English-speaking cinema is broadly naturalistic , aiming to align itself not with the artifice of some theatrical modes but with observed human behaviour; nevertheless, actors in this tradition, from Marlon Brando in A Streetcar Named Desire (1951; see Figure 3 ) to Imelda Staunton in Vera Drake (2004) and Gary Oldman in Tinker Tailor
important element of your worldview and, more specifically, of your film criticism? Explore how cinema has framed a particular class and its relations with other social fractions. You might, for example, assess a selection of film representations of the English working class produced during the past three decades that extends from Terence Davies’s Distant Voices, Still Lives (1988) to recent work directed by Clio Barnard, and that includes such titles as Raining Stones (1993), Brassed Off (1996), The Full Monty, Billy Elliot (2000), Vera Drake, Four