Chris Knipp
11-09-2004, 04:03 PM
Subtle miniatures that deliver a wallop
Since he moved from TV to film in the late Eighties Mike Leigh hasn’t made a single movie that wasn’t worth seeing, and Vera Drake, a period piece about a housecleaner who goes to jail in 1950 for “helping girls out when they’re in trouble,” continues his run of high quality work. In a sense Vera Drake is "Masterpiece Theater" for the liberal left. It’s full of English reserve and costume-conscious production values and features a uniformly excellent, selfless cast, but like Leigh’s films with contemporary settings (and unlike his 1999 Gilbert and Sullivan drama Topsy Turvy) it focuses primarily on moral issues and the dilemmas of the urban poor. The result is a quiet but thought-provoking triumph where all the elements -- acting, setting, editing -- are immaculate and the tidy resulting package delivers a surprisingly powerful emotional wallop along with its social message and its history lesson.
As we observe Vera (Imelda Staunton, superb in her role) bustling about every day in her neighborhood to cheer up invalids and her aged mother after polishing brass and floors for city toffs, we realize she’s bent on “helping” others at every level. She calls everyone "dear," even the cops who interrogate her at the end. There’s something both saintly and blind about her relentless kindness. Arguably she has a childish mind that’s incapable of seeing the shallowness of her do-gooding -- or the evil of her childhood friend Lily (Ruth Sheen) who sets up her “helping” jobs for her own gain. That her “service” for women with unwanted pregnancies is done for free is selfless on Vera's part, but also stupid: how can she not know after years of this that Lily's pocketing the cash?
FOR COMPLETE REVIEW GO HERE: http://www.chrisknipp.com/writing/viewtopic.php?t=359
Since he moved from TV to film in the late Eighties Mike Leigh hasn’t made a single movie that wasn’t worth seeing, and Vera Drake, a period piece about a housecleaner who goes to jail in 1950 for “helping girls out when they’re in trouble,” continues his run of high quality work. In a sense Vera Drake is "Masterpiece Theater" for the liberal left. It’s full of English reserve and costume-conscious production values and features a uniformly excellent, selfless cast, but like Leigh’s films with contemporary settings (and unlike his 1999 Gilbert and Sullivan drama Topsy Turvy) it focuses primarily on moral issues and the dilemmas of the urban poor. The result is a quiet but thought-provoking triumph where all the elements -- acting, setting, editing -- are immaculate and the tidy resulting package delivers a surprisingly powerful emotional wallop along with its social message and its history lesson.
As we observe Vera (Imelda Staunton, superb in her role) bustling about every day in her neighborhood to cheer up invalids and her aged mother after polishing brass and floors for city toffs, we realize she’s bent on “helping” others at every level. She calls everyone "dear," even the cops who interrogate her at the end. There’s something both saintly and blind about her relentless kindness. Arguably she has a childish mind that’s incapable of seeing the shallowness of her do-gooding -- or the evil of her childhood friend Lily (Ruth Sheen) who sets up her “helping” jobs for her own gain. That her “service” for women with unwanted pregnancies is done for free is selfless on Vera's part, but also stupid: how can she not know after years of this that Lily's pocketing the cash?
FOR COMPLETE REVIEW GO HERE: http://www.chrisknipp.com/writing/viewtopic.php?t=359