Get our issue, highlights, free stuff and more!  

  • About MT
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • STORE
  • RSS Feeds

Detroit Metro Times home page.

  • NEWS
  • ARTS
  • CULTURE
  • MUSIC
  • SCREENS
  • FOOD+DRINK
  • CALENDAR
  • BLOGS
  • BEST OF
  • FREE STUFF
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • MMJ
  • ARCHIVES
  • BLOWOUT
  • REFER LOCAL
News+Views Cover Stories News Hits Politics & Prejudices Stir It Up Higher Ground
Music Blahg News Blawg The B-Roll Reckless Eyeballing The Subterraneans
Arts Lit Up
Music Album Reviews Browse Local Music Music Events Add Your Act
Stories+Reviews Film Reviews Idiot Boxing Cheat Code
Food Stories Restaurant Reviews Find a Restaurant Find a Club Happy Hours Add a Restaurant Add a Club
Search Events Add an Event
Best of Detroit 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2004 2003 Best of Map
EVENT PHOTOS MT ON FACEBOOK MT ON TWITTER MT ON FLICKR
Classifieds Home Place an Ad Dating Real Estate Jobby Jobster
Culture Savage Love Motor City Cribs & Rides
Search Articles Search Authors Search Issues Latest Comments
BLOWOUT HOME HISTORY PRESS PHOTOS BLOWOUT BLOG
MEDICAL MARIJUANA HOME

Calendar

Restaurants

Clubs

  • Latest Comments
  • Popular Threads
  • Most Read
Most Read
  • The Whole truth That $5 million spent luring Whole Foods drives city’s independent grocers crazy | 5/16/2012
  • The devil inside The people who attend this church swear they see miracles. Who's to argue? | 5/2/2012
  • Your College Bucket List The must-do highlights of higher learning | 8/24/2011
  • Fifty Shades of annoyance At 19 years of marriage, novel stirs up her libido, what about his? | 5/16/2012
  • Malcolm X — still controversial A recent biography stirs debate as the iconic black nationalist is honored in Detroit | 5/16/2012
  • Nutritional Value - Readers' Choice Our readers pick the best places to scarf, nosh, tipple and dine | 4/27/2011
  • Battleship Sinking ship — Plus, Rihanna plays a stoic weapons specialist! | 5/18/2012

Print Email

Screens

Another year

Mike Leigh shows there's such a thing in life as 'too late'

Photo: , License: N/A

Why yes, I'll take a beer with my miserablism.


By Jeff Meyers

Published: February 2, 2011

Another year

GRADE: B

If exquisitely rendered, slow moving slice-of-life cinema isn't your thing, Mike Leigh's latest, Another Year, isn't going turn you into a convert. An uncanny chronicler of the ordinary, Leigh's movies are often plotless exercises in miserablism, creating complete little worlds that focus on the successes and disappointments of everyday people. They also boast some of the finest performances ever put to film.

Unfolding four seasons of birth, death, longing and love, Another Year reveals the consequences of aging while framing class, self-pity, regret and happiness as minor-key conflicts. Tom (Jim Broadbent) and Gerri (Ruth Sheen) are a longtime happily married couple living in well-educated middle-class harmony. Tom is a cheery geologist, and Gerri is the calm and kind therapist. The two live in cozy comfort with nary a harsh word between them. They spend lots of time on their farm allotment and are proud of their stable yet still single son, Joe (Oliver Maltman). Orbiting around this cartoonishly content couple, however, are satellites of despairing friends and family — in particular Mary and Ken.

A longtime secretarial co-worker and friend of Gerri, Mary (Lesley Manville) is a nervous, frantically social wreck, given to too many glasses of white wine and self-obsessing about her fading looks and bad choices in men. She harbors an unhealthy (and not completely unreturned) attraction for the much-younger Joe and desperately tries to hide the depression that's clearly gnawing away at her psyche. Needy and relentlessly solipsistic, she clings to the couple, hoping to absorb some of their stability and happiness. Ken (Peter Wight), on the other hand, Tom's gluttonous school-pal, is an overweight sad-sack who drinks, smokes and eats himself numb. Between stumbling stupors of sorrow and loneliness, he makes awkward passes at Mary and waxes nostalgic about the past.

Spring through winter, Leigh sets up recurring get-togethers — some celebratory (the birth of a co-worker's child, meeting Joe's new girlfriend), some sorrowful (the funeral of Tom's brother's wife) — and, initially, it doesn't seem as if much is going on. But the details, interpersonal dynamics and observations casually add up to revelation and, if not an actual story, then something close to storytelling. Yes, his tending-to-your-own-garden metaphors gets a tad labored, but Leigh never gives in to cheap irony or melodramatics.

While all of the performances are so naturalistic the actors disappear into their roles, it's Manville's twitchy Mary that astounds. Like a real-world Tennessee Williams character, she's tragically fascinating and more than a little tiresome. Which is exactly right. Leigh seems to view her constant self-pitying as a kind of handicap, or even masochism, and all we can do is marvel at its sad complexity.

And that's where a bit of smug superiority peeks out of Another Year. As Leigh puts the focus on working-class Mary's defeats and complaints, he only hints at the too-privileged contentment and unspoken judgments of Tom and Gerri. The two are never put under a microscope the way their hapless friend is, and thus they remain highly nuanced ciphers. Instead, the couple becomes a means by which Leigh can magnify the desolation that infects all their lower-class acquaintances. The film's final shots of Mary and Ronnie make clear the vast cultural and economic rift that separates them from Tom and Gerri's prosperous (all meanings of the word) life and the way age can both emotionally and physically deplete those who neglect it.

1 2 Next Page

> Email Jeff Meyers

We welcome user discussion on our site, under the following guidelines:

To comment you must first create a profile and sign-in with a verified DISQUS account or social network ID. Sign up here.

Comments in violation of the rules will be denied, and repeat violators will be banned. Please help police the community by flagging offensive comments for our moderators to review. By posting a comment, you agree to our full terms and conditions. Click here to read terms and conditions.
comments powered by Disqus


News

News+Views

Politics & Prejudices

News Hits

Stir It Up

Higher Ground

Comics

Blogs

Music Blahg

News Blawg

Reckless Eyeballing

The B-Roll

Blowout Blog

Best of Detroit

Best of Detroit

Best of Detroit 2010

Best of Map

Music

Music Homepage

Album Reviews

Add Music Event

Search Music Events

Arts

Arts Homepage

Book Reviews

Culture

Culture Homepage

Savage Love

Motor City Cribs & Rides

Screens

Screens Homepage

Film Reviews

Idiot Boxing

Events

Calendar

Search Calendar Events

Enter Calendar Event

Food

Food Homepage

Find a Restaurant

Clubs

Find a Club

Web

MT Newsletter

MT@Facebook

MT@MySpace

MT@Flickr

MT@Twitter

MT@Youtube

Archives

Search Archives

Search Authors

Search Issues

Latest Comments

Classified

Classified Home

Place Ad

Jobs

Services

Stuff For Sale

Massage

Personals

Adult

Automotive

Cars, Trucks+More

Services

Real Estate

Real Estate

For Rent

Roommates

Contact Us

About us

Staff Directory

Advertise

National Advertising

Work Here

Metro Times Stuff

Win Free Stuff

Velvet Rope Photos

Event Photos

RSS Feed

 Full Feed

© 2012 Metro Times