Another day. Another year - Our far-flung correspondents

Another day. Another year

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• Grace Wang in Toronto

Mike Leigh's Another Year (2010) is like a tender, swollen, beating heart that you hold within your palms: the soft flesh expands and contracts with every breath, and through the tiny crevices in between your fingers, life juices flow.

"Life is not always kind, is it?"

Gerri looks at Mary and quietly let those words slip. Mary catches her gaze, briefly. The letters settle over them like a mild fog, unmistakably present and non-disruptive, and the day proceeds on as it does.

Another day. Another year.

Through uncanny realism and probing characters, Leigh's latest film speaks of the pervasive dilemma of our kind: how do we live in this world in the presence of those so different and similar to ourselves at once? How do we make sense of each of our own way of life?


What a question.

Such a universal question requires no less a spectrum of responses, and here Leigh displays them all at once: unfolding, progressing, occasionally infringing upon each others' space, occasionally crossing trajectories; and always, after a gentle readjustment, each proceeds onwards steadily as before with nothing short of a gentle benevolence. Change is not so easily undertaken as spoken.


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Mary (Leslie Manville) knows the difficulties of change. She tastes it every day. From the moment she wakes up in the morning, looks in the mirror, and carefully put on the powders, liners, rouge, and mascara that will mimic the glow of a youth which slips further and further away by the day, she tastes it. The mask weights heavy, but is necessary. Youth and beauty are the currency of our self-enforced culture and Mary lives within its confines. Within it's vague and undeniable circumference, she must try to find happiness, and in the process, create a life around it.


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Gerri (Ruth Sheen) and Jim (Jim Broadbent), on the other hand, are the lucky ones. They have found that rare kind of domestic bliss, and simmer within it's all-encompassing glow. From the warmth of their cocoon, they look out with serenity, and observe those who are left in the chill. They see Mary, and they feel for her. They feed her, invite her into their home, and give her tomatoes from their garden to take away. But even if love can be home-grown, it doesn't quite taste the same when gifted as charity. The sentiments may be organic, but their transfer is not.

Another day. Another year.

Life is not always kind to its inhabitants, as Gerri observed, and Ken (Peter Wight) knows. An old friend of the couple, Ken shows up on a visit that feels all too familiar: booze, junk food, booze, more food, booze, cigarette, booze, booze. Repeat. Gerri and Jim look on with saintly patience, provide him with his vices of choice, and lends a shoulder to cry on when necessary. But what can they do? Life has laden Ken with extra weight that he carries both around his middle and on his soul. Like a deadbolt it has locked him in that lonely place of self-exile and middle age desperation, where company seems so dire, and those of yesterday have slipped away with frightening speed.


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Another day. Another year.

People are not kind to their own lives either. Ken admonishes the young folks who make so much ruckus, that it is impossible for him to go out to a bar anymore, until Tom reminds him that he, too, was once one of those young folks. "Oh, yeah." The recognition doesn't sink in with humor as intended. Like wading water, the splashes lose their appeal when you suddenly find yourself in the deep end, struggling to stay afloat.

Another day. Another year.

The most difficult kindness, though, is probably those between ordinary people like ourselves. Mary sees Ken, and is repulsed. She sees an overweight, lonely, sad, binge-drinking, chain-smoking person who is desperate for company and affection, and she wants nothing to do with him. Ken sees Mary, and is hopeful. He sees a lovely, lonely, sad, binge-drinking, chain-smoking person who is desperate for company and affection too, and he thought maybe they can do all those things together, and maybe shed the loneliness and sadness along the way. Unfortunately, Mary can't see past the physical weight on Ken, nor does she understand the depth of its matching emotional comrade shadowing her own existence. The weight is the same, just distributed differently. Ken wears it on his belt, Mary in her eyes.


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"We are very lucky." Gerri says.

"Yeah, you are. But you deserve it. You are both such lovely people." Mary smiles, and takes another gulp of her wine.

Is it luck, or is it something more? What does happiness depend on? How do we steer ourselves onto the path of companionship and contentment? These are the ultimate questions facing every human being, and they drive our daily existences into a frenzy. Despite the self-help books, talk shows, health clubs, online clubs, the magical formula remains as elusive as ever. Miraculously, Leigh does not attempt to solve the puzzle here. Instead, he guides us along the trajectories of the lives of these average people, and show us what it means to be alive, what it takes, and how these lovely people, and in turn us, manage to do it.

In the end, it comes down to managing. We manage our lives and all the messy, imperfect, unsatisfying bits of it. For most of us, we don't lack food, shelter, or comforts of daily living. For most of us, we are luckier than many others. For most of us, we are the lucky ones, and yet it doesn't feel that way.

"It's lovely having your dinner cooked for you," Mary gushes, "you don't really bother when you're by yourself, do you? Well I don't anyway."


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Leslie Manville is ravishing as Mary: intimate, nuanced, revealing, heartbreaking, but never cliché. She bring us not Mary the character, but Mary the person, someone with a past, a present, and a daunting future. Jim Broadbent and Ruth Sheen wear Tom and Gerri like well-worn pajamas, with all their recognizable wrinkles and rubbed patches, soaked through with care and good intentions. Peter Wight literally disappears into Ken, and the scene of him in the garden, reduced to sobs, buried in booze and old friends, is almost too painful to watch. He springs all your mid-life nightmares to life, and there is nowhere else to look. Oliver Maltman, as Joe, the son of Gerri and Jim, is a breath of fresh air. His performance is not to be overshadowed even in the presence of the great Manville: on a porch to an old tree house, in the shade, Joe has a conversation with Mary that reveals multitudes of both their backgrounds and personality. As Mary exclaims and explains and exudes and reflects, Joe sits there, eyes trained on her face, and says all the right words - not too much, not a false note. Even Katie, Joe's new girlfriend, played by Karina Fernandez, is as vibrant and endearing as she could and should be, without all the potential downfall of politeness and fake coiffed perfection.


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If the cast is shockingly and uniformly excellent, so must be said of their conductor Mike Leigh, who despite being known as a director possessing great sensitivity and human insights, is perhaps at his artistic peak here. Where as his previous films have mostly spanned mere weeks or months, here we stay for a whole year. Where as previous films have focused on one main character ("Vera Drake", "Happy Go Lucky"), here is a slew of main characters, each solid and lovable. Moreover, "Another Year" feels like a maturation of Leigh's most prevalent themes: why do we do what we do, and how do we live and be happy while doing it? Here, through the inviting spring, hot summer, chilly autumn, and dreary winter, answers are sought, and eventually gained and lost by all.

"Oh the baby!"

Life is not always kind. Luckily, a film can be.


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And indeed this is a story of kindness: life's kindness to us, our kindness to life, and our kindness to each other. It is not always possible to see it, but it is at least comforting to feel it, to be bathed in its benevolent glow, than to be left out in the cold.




 


 

Grace Wang's blog is at e t h e r i e l - m u s i n g s.
She Twitters at @etherielmusings.


 
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8 Comments

Sounds like the perfect Valentine's Day movie, Grace, reminding us that there's more to life (and love) than a box of chocolates.

I was going to wait until this film came out on DVD to see it, but now, maybe I'll plan a trip to the theater and indulge myself.

Grace,

I am humbled. "Another Year" was a film that captured a place in my heart too, but I feel that your words go beneath the surface and capture some of the essence of what's at work in the narrative.

I'm curious to know your thoughts on something. Some writers, like A.O. Scott, for example, have questioned whether or not Tom and Gerri are guilty of a middle-class malaise that looks down on the less fortunate, rather than being the fundamentally benevolent folks that I found them to be. Others, like Karina Longworth, (http://bit.ly/hLuwPI) suggest that they're condescending and smug. I was rather blindsided by these thoughts, as I'd been amazed by how much quickly and how much I fell in love with these two wonderful people. I suppose it's no secret which camp I fall into, but what do you think?

What's left to say? Only the age-old mantra of group therapy, with the exception that I mean it from the heart.

Thanks for sharing.

-Adam

Excellent work as always, Grace. This is my favorite film in quite some time.

(SPOILERS FOLLOW)

I found the film immensely generous, overflowing with the truth and the humor and the warmth and the sadness of real life, but with its memorable final shot, the feeling it left me with in the end was more akin to being left in the cold than being bathed in the glow of kindness. The final note in the film's rich symphony, and the one that echoed inside me as I left the theater, was a quietly devastating one. Mary receives kindness from Tom and Gerri, but it is, I think, a sometimes slightly condescending sort of kindness (and I say this without blame--indeed, I sympathized with Tom and Gerri for having to respond to the very difficult situations Mary sometimes put them in) but life itself is not kind to her, at least not in the way it is to Tom and Gerri, and though her situation is somewhat of her own making, I ached for her in the end. Throughout the film, Mary's car is so much more than a car--it is an ultimately sad symbol of her hopes for herself--travel and a more fulfilling life--and the way they fail to come to fruition. As Roger's reviews sometimes mention, perhaps one of the most vital things a marriage can provide is a witness to our lives. As talk at the table in the end turns to Tom and Gerri chatting about taking another one of their trips together (if I'm remembering correctly), the voices grow distant, Mary separate, reflecting perhaps on her solitude, on the idea that even if she could afford to travel, it wouldn't have the meaning that Tom and Gerri's travels have because it would be unshared and unwitnessed. Mary is among friends but profoundly alone.

"Another Year" is my second favorite movie of 2010. Mike Leigh is a master of setting moods and creating lively characters. The characters may be flawed but you just can't help but love and feel such great empathy for them. The film reminded me of one of my favorite films from 2009, "35 Shots of Rum." Both films are about life, relationships and the need to connect. When both films are over, you feel as though you've lost a group of friends that you've just met.

Within the time span of "Another Year," a child is born and a person dies. Almost every other critical life event that occurs between birth and death is gently explored by Leigh. The way that Leigh portrays life and matches it with the elements of the seasons is poetic. Such a beautiful display of humanity can only be pulled off by one of the great masters of cinema. Mike Leigh once again shows why he is currently my favorite British director working today.

Hi Adam,

I thought about addressing Tom and Geri's characters more in the piece, but then realized that it was probably more interesting to leave it to discussions.

I find it interesting that many find such faults with Tom and Geri because they were nice, but not completely nice. Were they suppose to pick one or the other? Isn't that what life is like? Haven't we all had that friend who is so glaringly a mess in part, but completely oblivious to how to fix it? Haven't we all been nice to that person, both because it's the decent thing to do, and because we can't bear to look away? Haven't we sometimes been curious to how that friend will turn out? Haven't we thought about what we can do, and contemplated what we should do? And to be honest, haven't we all, sometimes, after another glass of wine and another rescue session, formed our own opinions and sometimes, said them out loud?

We can't help being both nice and judgmental, helpful and still, caring and annoyed. It is called being human. The feeling is called complicated. No one is perfect, but most of us try to be.

In the end it doesn't really matter why Tom and Geri were nice to Mary. The important thing, to me, was that they were, because for that while they were the nicest people in her life, and without them and the sharing of their allotment, there's no telling how long she would've lasted in the cold.

Thanks everyone for your comments.

A nice review, Grace. I like Mike Leigh's films a lot, and I am certainly looking forward to watching his latest movie you tenderly introduce to us.

I agree with folks here who say Tom and Gerri are a bit smug and condescending toward Mary at times, but the film's great wisdom is in showing that we all struggle with those tendencies, based on the hand we're dealt in life at a given time. Mary pities and is revulsed by Ken, for example. What the film reveals (as pointed out so wondrously by Grace here) is how much work most people do to overcome these impulses, to provide what comfort we can. Tom and Gerri are "nice" folks, sure, but they're also in their own carefully constructed world-- and yet, their middle class insularity is not fundamentally who they are. Most of us want to be good and kind to others, but time, gravity, survival instincts and terrifying happenstance weigh on us heavily. Says Grace: "The weight is the same, just distributed differently."

Gorgeous.

My wife and I enjoyed this film immensely. She is a therapist, I have a construction background and we are approaching retirement age, so we could identify quite a bit with Tom and Gerri. But like real people we get under each others' skins a little more often than they do.

I think to fault Tom and Gerri for being middle class is like arguing that well-paid, unionized workers shouldn't have those benefits just because everyone else does not. Isn't it a solid middle class that is the best ground for democracy and that provides the financial security that gives any of us the luxury to do the work of growing our souls and extending a hand to others (who may take it when they are ready, or not)? It may make us boring, but happy.

I've know a few Marys and Ken was a man not unlike my own father. I've been as angry and acting out as the skinhead Carl. But I was inspired and quided to a mid-life ability to find happiness through a fearless honesty with myself regarding myself by people like Gerri and Tom who lived and taught by example.

I could have seen them as smug and condescending if I needed someone to direct my self-loathing toward. When I was younger I would have. Happiness consists of knowing how much (of anything) is enough and giving away the rest.

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Our Far-Flung Correspondents are commentators from all over the world, who contribute their reviews and observations. The FFCs are fine writers from (alphabetically) Brazil, Canada, Egypt, India, Mexico, the Philippines, South Korea, Turkey and the U.S. They meet every year at Ebertfest. Comments are open. -- RE

Recent Comments

  • Holbein: My wife and I enjoyed this film immensely. She is read more
  • Steven Boone: I agree with folks here who say Tom and Gerri read more
  • Seongyong Cho: A nice review, Grace. I like Mike Leigh's films a read more
  • Grace Wang: Hi Adam, I thought about addressing Tom and Geri's characters read more
  • Juan: "Another Year" is my second favorite movie of 2010. Mike read more
  • Caro: Excellent work as always, Grace. This is my favorite film read more
  • Adam: Grace, I am humbled. "Another Year" was a film that read more
  • litdreamer: Sounds like the perfect Valentine's Day movie, Grace, reminding us read more