THE LADY IN THE VAN – The Review

THE LADY IN THE VAN

Maggie Smith brings an irresistible irascible charm to her role as a homeless woman who parks her van the driveway of playwright Alan Bennett and then stays for 15 years, in THE LADY IN THE VAN. Although this is a far different character from her role as the Dowager Countess, “Downton Abbey” fans will delight in finding a similar comic brilliance in Smith’s Miss Shepard, with the same sense of her own importance and an iron determination to have her own way. The quirky and charming THE LADY IN THE VAN showcases Smith’s considerable skill in dominating every scene – in fact, the whole film.

Nicholas Hytner, who also directed HISTORY BOYS, brings a lot of dry, self-deprecating British humor to this screen adaptation of Bennett’s partly biographical play. Although the story is narrated by and told from the point of view of playwright Alan Bennett (Alex Jennings), it is Smith’s eccentric, maddening character that steals the show.

The film manages the difficult task of walking a line between comedy and pathos by not sentimentalizing Smith’s Miss Shepard. Reprising her stage role, Smith is a delight as this difficult yet intriguing old woman. Hytner also brings in some cast members from his HISTORY BOYS, such as Dominic Cooper, in small roles.

To its credit, the film avoids sentimentalizing homelessness or mental illness,in part by keeping a distinctly British dry-humor tone. An early scene deals in a frank, funny way with an inescapable consequence of living in a van without a shower. As Bennett describes it, the mix of odors trailing in Miss Shepard’s wake are distinctive, including the onions she is fond of eating and the lavender powder she is equally fond of using to disguise the onions and other smells. As delivered by actor Alex Jennings as Bennett, the observation is both pointed and very funny.

The story mixes fact and fiction, which Jennings’ character bluntly tells the audience. Bennett’s character is divided into two parts – the writer and the private man – which allows the actor to engage in comic conversations with himself – about his work, his flagging personal life, his conflicted feelings about his aging mother and the lady in the van living in his driveway.

The story is set in 1960s London, a time when tolerance towards the homeless has become a fashionable attitude but being gay is still something the playwright might keep under wraps. The eccentric, bossy lady living in the van, Miss Shepard, had taken up residence already on the leafy, prosperous street when Bennett bought a house. The neighbors express a pitying tolerance of the homeless woman while silently hoping she would move on. Strong-willed, rude and odd, the old lady parks in front of one house after another, until the homeowners irritate her into moving down the block. Those irritations include by playing music or interrupting her with offers of food, which she takes but for which she never thanks them.

When street cleaners pester her to move her now-non-functional van, she basically browbeats the playwright into letting her park the van in his driveway. Temporarily, of course. For 15 years.

Despite having little hesitation about manipulating people to get her way, Miss Shepard is surprisingly secretive about her past and even who she is, telling people she is “incognito.” A man who appears creeping around one night, Mr. Underwood (Jim Broadbent), hints at a sinister secret but we learn little about her history until late in the film. An early scene suggests a traffic accident is part of why this secretive old woman is living in a van.

The reserved, almost reclusive Bennett is struggling in his work as a playwright, and also with what to do about his clinging aging mother, who would like to move in with him. It is a prospect the playwright dreads, although he ends up with another old lady, a stranger, camped out on his doorstep. Trying to establish a personal life, the gay Bennett brings home a series of nice looking young men but never seems to be able to quite speak up and make a connection.

The story contrasts Bennett’s relationship with his mother and the lady in the van, as well as coping with his own struggles as a writer and to build a personal life for himself. Miss Shepard is never forthcoming about her past although there are intriguing hints that she was once a nun and has a special connection to music. Despite her rudeness, Bennett becomes protective of her, even possessive, and begrudgingly fond.

Bennett’s two-part character, both played by Jennings with perfect low-key humor, provides a running comic dialog, while expressing Bennett’s inner thoughts. Sometimes those inner thoughts are to stand up to Miss Shepard, who bullies him mercilessly, although the polite, reserved Bennett never does. Despite their long acquaintance, the pair only ever call each other Mr. Bennett and Miss Shepard, and Bennett even bristles at a social worker who is assigned to the old woman, when she calls her Mary, informing her that it is not her real name which he has learned is Margaret – he thinks. In some ways, the social worker prompts Bennett to learn more about the woman who lived in his driveway all these years.

The film takes a turn towards whimsy at its end, which might irritate some viewers but fits well with determinedly unsentimental and comic tone. For those who relish low-key British humor, THE LADY IN THE VAN provides a pleasant ride, especially with the incomparable Maggie Smith at the wheel.

THE LADY IN THE VAN OPENS IN ST. LOUIS ON FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5

OVERALL RATING:  4 OUT OF 5 STARS

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Win Tickets To The Advance Screening of INTO THE WOODS In St. Louis

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INTO THE WOODS finally hits theaters on Christmas Day and WAMG has your passes to see it first!

INTO THE WOODS is a modern twist on the beloved Brothers Grimm fairy tales, intertwining the plots of a few choice stories and exploring the consequences of the characters’ wishes and quests. This humorous and heartfelt musical follows the classic tales of Cinderella (Anna Kendrick), Little Red Riding Hood (Lilla Crawford), Jack and the Beanstalk (Daniel Huttlestone), and Rapunzel (MacKenzie Mauzy)—all tied together by an original story involving a baker and his wife (James Corden & Emily Blunt), their wish to begin a family and their interaction with the witch (Meryl Streep) who has put a curse on them.

Rob Marshall, the talented filmmaker behind the Academy Award®-winning musical “Chicago” and Disney’s “Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides,” helms the film, which is based on the Tony®-winning original musical by James Lapine, who also penned the screenplay, and legendary composer Stephen Sondheim, who provides the music and lyrics.

WAMG invites you to enter for a chance to win passes (Good for 2) to the advance screening of INTO THE WOODS on Thursday, December 18th at 7PM in the St. Louis area. We will contact the winners by email.

Answer the following:

What are the 4 items the baker and his wife need to bring to the witch to reverse the curse?

TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME, ANSWERS AND EMAIL ADDRESS IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.

2. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

The film is rated PG.

http://movies.disney.com/into-the-woods/

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INTO THE WOODS

WAMG Talks To IAIN SOFTLEY : TRAP FOR CINDERELLA

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TRAP FOR CINDERELLA, the new film written and directed by the critically acclaimed filmmaker Iain Softley (The Skeleton Key, The Wings of the Dove) is available on digital platforms, including SundanceNow as of the 13th. Recently, I was able to interview Softley about the film. I might have snuck in a HACKERS question too. Check it out below.

Micky is a fun-loving photographer, living a party lifestyle in London until a chance encounter with a childhood friend changes her world forever. The opposite to life-and-soul Micky, Do is a quiet bank clerk, with little by way of a social life. Yet much to the annoyance of her DJ boyfriend Jake, Micky is all too delighted to reacquaint herself with Do, embracing her old friend with typical gusto. But when they return to the tranquil French villa where they spent so many happy summers in their youth, tragedy strikes. A fire engulfs the building, leaving Do dead and Micky badly burnt and blighted by amnesia. Unable to even recall her own name, Micky is forced on a shocking journey of self-discovery. For nothing – friends, relatives, lovers and even herself – is as she remembers it.

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TRAP FOR CINDERELLA is based on a novel. What drew you to this story?

I was gripped by the novel when I read it, the twists and turns of the plot, but also the way it got inside the heads of both girls. It was also very eloquent about the way that we often envy people or their lives, when if we were in their shoes, we might take a different view. In fact the observation in the book that one’s unhappiness will not necessarily be solved by switching lives with some else, is a central theme of Wing’s of the Dove too.

Because the film is based on a novel… Was there any pressure to stay true to the book, or did you take liberties with it?

I made a very loose adaptation of the novel. I really only became confident in the script when I made it about people that I known who were close to me who were similar to the main characters. A number of scenes in the film are not from the book at all but are taken from situations that I have observed first hand.

There was a film adaptation made in 1965. Did you look at the other film before starting your own? Or did you choose to ignore it?

I didn’t see the original film and after many inquiries in France have never met anyone else who did. Sebastien Japrisot himself told me that the film was barely released and that no one saw it, so it never really was an issue for me. In fact I approached my adaption of the book as if it was the first time that the book was being adapted.

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What was behind your decision to set the film in modern times?

The initial reason was budgetary, because the original drafts I wrote were set in Paris and the South of France. As soon as I made the change I realized it was the right decision. In many way the Bohemian scene on London’s East End where much of the action takes place, is more like 60s Paris, where the book was set, than contemporary Paris is. It was also exciting making a contemporary film set in my home town. All my other films that take place today are filmed elsewhere. It also meant that we could make a film that was very immediate in the way it reflected the world in which it was set. Often we shot on the streets with members of the public.

Since you wrote this script, did the cast stick to it verbatim, or was there room to improvise?

Because I had written the script myself I felt very easy about improvising, but it was me who was doing the improvising! I quite often changed the dialogue and in a couple of cases had ideas for new scenes or sequences as I was shooting. To me that was a liberty that came with writing the script.

I have to ask… Did you ever think HACKERS would gain such a cult following? What does that film mean to you today? Has your view on the film changed at all?

At the time we were shooting we felt we were tapping into the internet as a sub culture, a rock n roll for the 90s, in a way that no one else seemed to be at the time. That’s why the clothes and the music and the environments as well as the language and the gangs that the hackers hung out in were very important to the substance of the film. Everyone else seemed to be focusing on the technological consequences and not the cultural or social consequences. And a lot of people didn’t seem to get that this was what the film was about at the time. So if people are into it now, well that’s great!

FOR MORE INFO: 

FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/TrapForCinderella

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TRAP FOR CINDERELLA is in select theaters and is also be available to watch on Cable VOD, SundanceNOW and other digital outlets now

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TRAP FOR CINDERELLA – The Giveaway

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TRAP FOR CINDERELLA, the new film written and directed by the critically acclaimed filmmaker Iain Softley (The Skeleton Key, The Wings of the Dove) is available on digital platforms, including SundanceNow as of the 13th, and to celebrate WAMG is giving away codes to watch the film for free (on SundanceNow).

The film follows a rekindled friendship between two young women, Micky and Do. Soon fondness   grows into obsessions as their friendship blossoms. A relaxing trip to France turns deadly when a fire engulfs the pair, leaving Do dead and Micky badly burnt. Unable to recall anything, Micky is forced on a shocking journey of self-discovery.

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TO ENTER:

1. YOU MUST BE A U.S. RESIDENT WITH A U.S. SHIPPING ADDRESS. NO P.O. BOXES.

2. PLACE YOUR NAME, A VALID EMAIL, AND ANSWER TO THE QUESTION BELOW IN THE COMMENT SECTION OF THIS POST.

3. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE FILM FROM SUNDANCE NOW TO DATE? 

WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN THROUGH A RANDOM DRAWING OF QUALIFYING CONTESTANTS. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. PRIZES WILL NOT BE SUBSTITUTED OR EXCHANGED.

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Synopsis: Micky is a fun-loving photographer, living a party lifestyle in London until a chance encounter with a childhood friend changes her world forever. The opposite to life-and-soul Micky, Do is a quiet bank clerk, with little by way of a social life. Yet much to the annoyance of her DJ boyfriend Jake, Micky is all too delighted to reacquaint herself with Do, embracing her old friend with typical gusto. But when they return to the tranquil French villa where they spent so many happy summers in their youth, tragedy strikes. A fire engulfs the building, leaving Do dead and Micky badly burnt and blighted by amnesia. Unable to even recall her own name, Micky is forced on a shocking journey of self-discovery. For nothing – friends, relatives, lovers and even herself – is as she remembers it.

FOR MORE INFO: 

FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/TrapForCinderella

6312_159241010926797_1656169594_n

TRAP FOR CINDERELLA is in select theaters and is also be available to watch on Cable VOD, SundanceNOW and other digital outlets now

Trap4C_RetouchedPoster-lores

 

 

HUGO – Behind The Scenes With Martin Scorsese Video

Go behind the scenes with director Martin Scorsese as he describes the magic of his new 3D film HUGO. Scorsese screened an unfinished version last night at the New York Film Festival.

“This is a work in progress,” he told the packed audience. “I hope that those of you who really do like it come and see the final film.”

Here’s another look at the delightful trailer that debuted earlier this summer.

John Logan’s HUGO screenplay is based on Brian Selznick’s New York Times bestseller “The Invention of Hugo Cabret” and is produced by Scorsese, Graham King, Tim Headington and Johnny Depp. The film stars Asa Butterfield, Chloe Grace Moretz, Sacha Baron Cohen, Ben Kingsley, Jude Law, Ray Winstone, Christopher Lee, Helen McCrory, Richard Griffiths, Frances de la Tour, Emily Mortimer, and Michael Stuhlbarg.

HUGO will be in theaters November 23rd.
Visit the film’s official site: www.HugoMovie.com
“Like” it on Facebook: www.facebook.com/HugoMovie