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Happy-Go-Lucky
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Directed by Mike Leigh
Sally Hawkins and Eddie Marsan star in director Mike Leigh's lighthearted comedy concerning an eternally optimistic teacher living and working in North London. Thirty-year-old teacher Poppy (Hawkins) always has a smile on her face, and does her best to brighten the days of those around her by making small talk and cracking jokes. For the past ten years, Poppy has lived with her best friend, Zoe (Alexis Zegerman), a fellow teacher whose wry outlook on life serves as the perfect counterbalance to Poppy's effervescent charm. One day, after her bike is stolen, Poppy decides that it's time to take driving lessons and enrolls in the Axle School of Motoring. Almost instantly, Poppy and her stressed-out instructor, Scott (Eddie Marsan), clash. Still, it seems that there's more to this relationship than surface appearances would suggest. After accompanying her colleague Heather (Sylvestra Le Touzel) to a tango class taught by a particularly passionate instructor (Karina Fernandaz), Poppy connects with kindly school social worker Tim (Samuel Roukin). Of course, Tim can't help but fall for a woman of such boundless compassion, but how will Poppy's increasingly jealous driving instructor react to the news of her most recent romance? ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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apulrangapulrang Better for it ...
by apulrang in apulrang Blog
loved it.
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"I'd like to know a Poppy. As Director Mike Leigh says in the DVD commentary, "I wish that I'd been taught in elementary school by teachers like Poppy. I think I'd be a better person for it if I had been. And I'm sure you feel the same." " [More]
JimBellJimBell Happy-Go-Lucky review
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
loved it.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"I’m not sure why I like Happy-Go-Lucky (2008) so much. For one reason, I was worried when I heard it was a portrait of a relentlessly happy person, but Poppy’s (Sally Hawkins) happiness is far from mono-dimensional. While she is bubbly most of the time, " [More]
mconrad3mconrad3 Happy-Go-Lucky
by mconrad3 in mconrad3 Blog
liked it.
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"I'll admit I'm not the happiest person around. In fact, it's not even on the top ten words you'd use to describe me. So you can imagine my sentiments when one of my friends suggested I see a film called Happy-Go-Lucky. It took some pushing, but I finally got around to checking it out for myself. I'm surprised to say I ended up liking it, if not wondering why the last couple of movies I've seen have one hour expositions. Poppy, a young grammar school teacher living in London, seems to b " [More]
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by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
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"We’re less than two weeks away from receiving this year’s Oscar nominations, and though none of the major categories are completely predictable just yet, each has at least three or four certai " [More]
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"HITTING THEATERS 3/13 Disney's latest leading man: Dwayne Johnson in Race to Witch Mountain Race to Wit " [More]
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"[quote user="Ravie13"] Sid and Nancy were sitting in a delicatessen looking rather dazed and confused. Walking the Line " [More]
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All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Happy-Go-Lucky represents yet another installment in Mike Leigh's ongoing canon of odes to working-class Britons leading quiet lives of desperation. The main character, Poppy (the extraordinary Sally Hawkins), is a charming and charismatic 30-year-old schoolteacher who operates according to a single principle: confront the ills of the world with bubbly exuberance and a series of lighthearted jests. The narrative arc brings Poppy to a moment of life-changing disillusionment -- not the shattering disillusionment that will send the young woman tumbling down into a mire of cynical pessimism, but the sort that will impart her with a tad more wisdom than she initially demonstrated. Many viewers will feel distanced from Poppy at first glance; her laugh-it-off attitude feels both extremely grating and pitifully naïve. Leigh spends much of the movie dispelling our misperceptions about this most unusual young woman. One might be inclined, for instance, to read her free-spiritedness as indicative of a lack of intelligence; however, Poppy, as it turns out, excels at her difficult full-time teaching job. And one might, for example, be inclined to read her proclivity for turning everything into a joke as insensitivity to others around her. But nothing could be further from the truth -- we witness her sudden gravity in the face of a little boy beating up others in her classroom, and marvel at the gentility and compassion with which she handles it. We begin to realize, over the arc of the narrative, that the up-front exterior qualities are in fact coping devices; one wouldn't be surprised to learn that the thick-skinned Poppy may have encountered severe domestic hardships early on in life and admirably learned how to contend with them. In the film's most telling scene, she gazes out the window and declares, "Look at that beautiful sky." Leigh then cuts to a shot of a blue sky suddenly threatened by menacing clouds. It's doubtful that the writer-director could have devised a more telling visual metaphor for Poppy's perception of the world. Poppy wins the audience over with two heart-rending scenes so intransigent and finely felt that the emotions grow palpable. One involves the troubled student, whom Poppy speaks to with the assistance of a kindly social worker, and another involves a homeless derelict whom Poppy befriends one night while walking home. She speaks to the man not patronizingly, but completely on the level -- and as she does, Leigh cuts to a close-up of the man's face, as grateful tears well up in his eyes. The character of Poppy, like the writer-director, exudes humanism, and Leigh wants to show us that such humanism indeed has merit -- that it would help if we were all a little bit more compassionate and vulnerable to one another. The director wants to reveal the limits of this humanism as well, and to this end, he relies on the beleaguered relationship between Poppy and her driving instructor, Scott (Eddie Marsan). The latter is really some piece of work -- he's an angry, irascible misogynist who has apparently gravitated to Satanism as a way of life. He repeatedly screams, "En-Ra-Ha, En-Ra-Ha, En-Ra-Ha," at her during their lessons and orders her to "focus on the eye at the top of the pyramid!" Between this and his nearly unintelligible exhortations about an angel expelled from Heaven prior to Lucifer, one gains a window into Scott's twisted psychosis, and his reliance on the occult as an emotional anchor. We can see early on that he isn't buying any of Poppy's attempts to mollify his anger, and indeed, that her efforts in his direction are not merely wasted but seriously counterproductive. The picture benefits enormously from Marsan's performance; he pulls us into Scott, making us feel the poor man's inner rage, turmoil, and deep-seated confusion, to such a degree that he nearly out-acts Hawkins. Leigh's genius, as always, lies in constructing a loose, semi-improvised narrative with innumerable scenes that fail to drive the narrative forward, but offer us glistening behavioral and psychological insights into his characters that we would almost certainly miss in more tightly scripted films. The picture as a whole benefits not merely from the excellent performances, but from its warm emotional core and its infectious love of people, topped off by a mature (though not jaded) sobriety about human limitations that thoroughly validates everything preceding it. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
 

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