SLIFF 2017 Review – THE HIPPOPOTAMUS

 

THE HIPPOPOTAMUS screens as part of the 26th Annual Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival on Sunday, November 5 at 1 PM at Landmark’s Tivoli Theatre. Click HERE for ticket information. It also screens there on Sunday, November 12 at 9:15 PM. Click HERE for ticket information for that day.

From across the pond comes a pitch black comedy set amongst the veddy, veddy upper classes. Proving that Larry David doesn’t have a monopoly in the US as an ill-tempered cranky curmudgeon, celebrated actor/ writer Stephen Fry gives us a most unlikely screen hero, middle-aged failed poet, reviled theatre critic, and “boozehound” Ted Wallace. He’s played with swaggering bravado by Roger Allam, an actor known for his deep baritone, who has amassed a long list of supporting roles (THE QUEEN, THE BOOK THIEF) and now proves that he’s more than ready for a leading role. After being canned from his theatre critic newspaper job (in a very funny sequence he heckles an inept Shakespeare cast, who leap into the audience to physically attack him) he is pleased to be approached by a lovely young woman at his favorite pub. Turns out that she’s the daughter of a former flame, who seems to have been cured of a fatal malady by the healing powers of young David Logan, Ted’s godson. Ted is hired by this woman, Jane, to look into David’s “gift”. And so Ted returns to Swafford Hall and re-unites with eccentric billionaire Michael Logan (Matthew Modine) and his wife Anne (Fiona Shaw). Seems there are other guests, drawn by stories of David’s talents. Flamboyant director Oliver Mills (Tim McInnerny) wants off his meds, while the much-married socialite Valerie Richmonde (Lynn Renee) wants her daughter Clara (Emma Curtis) to shed her plain appearance and blossom into a beauty. Playing sleuth, Wallace is determined to learn the truth, and answer all of Jane’s questions.

Director John Jencks has crafted an entertaining mix of farce and upper-crust mystery. The location work is superb, making the Logan estate a modern-day castle of secrets. But the film works best as a great showcase for this cast. Despite his surly attitude and penchant for the bottle. Allam’s Wallace is a most compelling detective. He’s equal parts W.C. Fields, the late, much missed Christopher Hitchens, Sherlock Holmes, Poirot,and Columbo. He’s given great support by McInnerny as the over-the-top diva, who’s hiding  much sadness over his fading years. And kudos to the lone “Yank” in the cast, Modine as the aloof, self-absorbed master of the mansion. The witty script is full of devastating insults, quick retorts, and some sight gags that truly shock (David’s “laying on of the hands” is unorthodox). Though the title beast is only mentioned in passing, THE HIPPOPOTAMUS is wild wonder full of beastly behavior.

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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Watch The New TAMARA DREWE Trailer

Here’s the first domestic trailer for Stephen Frears’ TAMARA DREWE. From Sony Pictures Classics, TAMARA DREWE will show at TIFF on September 12 & 13.

Synopsis:

Based on Posy Simmonds’ beloved graphic novel of the same name (which was itself inspired by Thomas Hardy’s classic Far From the Madding Crowd) this wittily modern take on the romantic English pastoral is a far cry from Hardy’s Wessex. Tamara Drewe’s present-day English countryside—stocked with pompous writers, rich weekenders, bourgeois bohemians, a horny rock star, and a great many Buff Orpington chickens and Belted Galloway cows—is a much funnier place. When Tamara Drewe sashays back to the bucolic village of her youth, life for the locals is thrown upside down. Tamara—once an ugly duckling—has been transformed into a devastating beauty (with help from plastic surgery). As infatuations, jealousies, love affairs and career ambitions collide among the inhabitants of the neighboring farmsteads, Tamara sets a contemporary comedy of manners into play using the oldest magic in the book—sex appeal.

TAMARA DREWE opens in theaters on October 8, 2010. The film is rated R for language and some sexuality.

Source: YAHOO! Movies