Happy-Go-Lucky (15)

Film

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Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>5/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5
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Time Out says

Wed Feb 13 2008

Sally Hawkins is a real delight in Mike Leigh’s new film as Poppy, a 30-year-old Londoner with a bubbly nature and an ever-present laugh that teeters between lovable and annoying. Hawkins’ performance, and Leigh’s harnessing of it, is a tease: when we first see Poppy, cycling through the West End and joking with a grumpy bookshop assistant before joining her friends for a late-night drunken session, we don’t know what to make of her. She’s loud, joyful and indulges in terrible jokes; surely there’s something wrong with her?

The trick that Leigh and Hawkins finally pull off so cleverly by the end of 'Happy-Go-Lucky’ is that we’re entirely in cahoots with her. Poppy is a mirror to us all: if we find her blind optimism and sunny nature hard to swallow, perhaps there’s something wrong with us instead? By then, too, we know that Poppy is not the blinkered soul we may first think: she is compassionate, perceptive and harbours her own sadnesses like the rest of us.

Leigh always finds plot in character, and ‘Happy-Go-Lucky’ is more of a portrait than a story; a film that’s built around one performance. He is less concerned here, unlike, say, ‘Secrets & Lies’ and ‘Vera Drake’, with following a driving narrative than with minutely observing Poppy through her relationships with others, whether it’s the kids she teaches at her primary school, her repressed driving instructor (Eddie Marsan, excellently playing a heavy-duty bag of hang-ups), her close friend and flatmate Zoe (Alexis Zegerman) or her older, more settled colleague Heather (Sylvestra Le Touzel), whom she joins at flamenco lessons after work. In that sense, it’s comparable to ‘Naked’.

It’s a study in sadness versus happiness, a study in teachers and the taught, a study in how we carry with us everyday the burdens of what we have and haven’t learned. You know you’re watching something both delightfully light-footed and acutely meaningful when Leigh moves so nimbly between scenes at Poppy’s school, her flamenco class and her driving lessons. There’s also a wonderfully moving scene, darker and more poetic in tone, when Poppy encounters a tramp late at night. It’s a funny film – a surprise perhaps after ‘Vera Drake’ – and, crucially, it aches with truth.

99+

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Release details

Rated:

15

UK release:

Fri Apr 18 2008

Duration:

118 mins

Cast and crew

Cast:

Kate O'Flynn, Sarah Niles, Alexis Zegerman, Eddie Marsan

Screenwriter:

Sally Hawkins, Mike Leigh

Director:

Mike Leigh

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 3/5 (138 ratings)
  • This is time you will never get back. Where does one start? Critics should be ashamed of themselves for kissing Mike Leighs backside. Irritating characters, implausible plot, insulting to teachers, and just plainly unfunny. Do not say you were not warned!!!!!

    Alex Sun Apr 20 2008
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • The worst film I have seen for a long time. There was no plot and I would disagree that Poppy is 'Happy Go Lucky - more like seriously affected. I went with an open mind but can't understand why anyone would give it so many stars.

    Valerie Sun Apr 20 2008
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • I came out fo the cinema and told the two people waiting in the queue to go and get their money back. My friend fell asleep, I optimistically watched the whole way through wating for something to happen. When Poppy got a bad back I hoped it was something fatal so we could at least have a plot. When my friend woke up we both agreed we had faces like the judges on Britain's got Talent when confronted with a tuneless no-hope. playing a tune on a sink plunger. We went to see the film because it has a 4/5 star rating on several websites but sorry to say THE EMPOROR HAS NO CLOTHES.

    Betty Sun Apr 20 2008
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • When reading the comments by the poor grumpy-grumps who take such issue with this film, the thoughts of another mancunian son who came to London were brought to mind. Perhaps the point of 'Happy-Go-Lucky' is that, as Stephen Patrick said; " t's so easy to laugh It's so easy to hate It takes guts to be gentle and kind" And if you're having a bad day today and a bit down in the dumps, chin up chum, give this film a go, might make you feel a bit better?

    Pete Cook Sun Apr 20 2008
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Dreadful. The kind of film about which critics pontificate and write twaddle when they're too afraid of telling a director like Mike Leigh that his film stinks. They'd rather delude themselves into believing they're watching a piece of subtle art than admit the plainly obvious - that this irritating piece of film-making isn't funny, isn't clever, doesn't "reflect on the state of...blah blah", and simply sticking a famous director's name on it doesn't change a damn thing. People who think this is anything except trash are just trying desperately to pretend they're somehow smarter than the rest of us.

    Reynard Fox Sun Apr 20 2008
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • As a true to life narrative and commentary on London 2008, as I sat in the Holloway Road Odeon, watching the streets outside flash up on teh silver screen, I was torn between the class acting and the grim realisation that modern London is a great place from which to emigrate.....

    steve Sun Apr 20 2008
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  • Quite possibly the worst film I have ever seen. Shallow, and banal beyond bearing, insulting to social workers and children in distress, I was moved only to rage at watching it. The characters in "Notting Hill" are more 3D.

    Frances Sat Apr 19 2008
    Rated as: 1/5
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  • Much has been said about how irritating the 'Poppy' character can be or might be seen at first. For me though the character is one imbued with a sense of humanity and spirituality, some one who is not afraid to interact with and try to understand those perhaps less well off and isolated from the society portrayed in the film. For me this humane- ness, as with all Mike Leigh's films, is what makes this film need several viewings in order to see what it really has to offer. I'm certainly going to be seeing it a few more times!

    Verity Healey Wed Apr 16 2008
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • At the beginning you think this must be the most irritating woman set on film, but her outlook on life soon becomes infectious. A wonderful, uplifting film, perfectly cast....but believe it or not, my driving instructor was even more scary than this one!

    Glenn Marshall Mon Apr 14 2008
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • I was lucky enough to attend the crew screening, and still brings a smile to my face when i think about Poppy,her bicycle, her club mates and those dreaded driving lessons.. With the movie having teachers, both school and driving, in central roles, it demonstrates that the twists and turns of our lives are our real teachers, should we learn to take the lessons they teach us to heart. Poppy's infectious and posiive attitude to life stayed with me for days, and credit to Mike Leigh and his team for pulling off a real London gem of a movie, to which I'll be "Happy-to-Pay" for and see again!

    Anthony Robinson Sat Feb 16 2008
    Rated as: 5/5
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