THE LADY IN THE VAN (2015)
Directed by Nicholas
Hynter
TriStar, 104 minutes,
PG-13
* * *
If you're tired of seeing Maggie Smith as a dowager
aristocrat, The Lady in the Van ought
to do the trick. In this one Smith is a begrimed transient who reeks of excrement
and is crazier than a Southern white boy in a Mexican restaurant. The film is a
reprisal of a 1999 London theatre production of a play written by Alan Bennett
and directed by Nicholas Hynter for which Ms. Smith won an Olivier Award for
Best Actress. It doesn't work as well on the screen, but it's a diverting way
to wile away an evening.
The set up is quintessentially English on many levels. It
takes place during the years 1974-1989, when playwright Alan Bennett (Alex
Jennings) lived in Camden, a London neighborhood caught between Thatcher-era gentrification
and callousness and older laws that, among other things, did not allow toffs to
exile transients legally parked in their leafy neighborhoods. Through a series
of events, one of them–Mary Shepherd/Fairchild (Smith)–ends up camped in
Bennett's driveway for 15 years. The film is partly about Bennett's developing
relationship with Mary, but it's also about a few things very British indeed: social class relations, surface niceness and
inner hypocrisy, muddling through, duty versus desire, and never quite
mustering the courage to say or do what one truly wishes. Bennett cleverly
expresses the last of these by bifurcating himself; that is, we see two
Bennetts–call them Id and Superego–debating each other over questions of the
Alan Bennett public mask versus the inner repressed Bennett. The tip of the
iceberg is that he's a closeted gay milquetoast writing mannered plays, but would
like to be assertive, out of the closet, and tackling issues that he cares
about.
Mary is a pungent, sharp-tongued, and earthy challenge to
all things repressive–except her own guilt. It gives away nothing to say that
she was once a piano prodigy, but some things went very wrong and diverted her
path. (You'll learn this almost right away.) Mix an overdose of Catholic sin to
British reserve and you've pretty much poisoned chances for a happy adulthood.
But I shan't spoil the details.
As a film, this probably works better as the play it once
was. The screen adds little except to heighten a sense of Mary's
grossness. That's not altogether a
good thing as it occasionally makes it harder to see her humanity. Sometimes
the most fun is picking out things in the background, like the fact that most
of the original cast of Bennett's The
History Boys appear in cameos, including Dominic Cooper, James Corden, and
Frances de la Tour. Roger Allam,
Jim Broadbent and Deborah Findlay also appear in minor roles; hence, like
nearly all English films, the acting is uniformly top drawer. But expect the
pacing, dialogue, and mannered expressions of the stage. Not a lot actually
happens, though much is revealed. Is this a great film? No; but it's Alan
Bennett, so you know the script will be good. And who can resist a stinky Maggie Smith? Rob Weir
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