• Recall this Book 17: A Conversation with Mike Leigh

    Author(s):
    Mike Leigh, John Plotz
    Date:
    2019
    Subject(s):
    Motion pictures
    Item Type:
    Podcast
    Tag(s):
    Mike Leigh, Film
    Permanent URL:
    https://doi.org/10.17613/5pq5-cc43
    Abstract:
    The British filmmaker Mike Leigh puts the move into movies: he never stops changing, never stops inventing. In nearly 50 years of filmmaking, he has ranged from comic portrayals of ordinary life amid the social breakdowns of Thatcher's Britain (Life is Sweet, High Hopes) to gritty renditions of working-class constraint and bourgeois hypocrisy (Meantime, Abigail's Party, Hard Labour) to period films that reveal the "profoundly trivial" elements of artistic life even two centuries in the past (Topsy-Turvy, Mr. Turner). Leigh (did you guess he was our Mystery Guest from the grainy photo we posted last week?) contains multitudes. What Roland Barthes says about the novels of Marcel Proust is true of Mike Leigh films as well: you notice different things every time you return to them. When he sat down with John in Columbus, Ohio (at a Victorianist convention, no less!) they were united by love for a hometown boy made good: James Thurber. The conversation ranged from recording working-class voices in the 19th century to Method acting to the pointlessness of fetishizing closeups to the movies John had never seen and should have-and that's only the first twenty minutes. It cries out for footnotes, but maybe the best result of all this talk would be simply your decision to go off and see a couple of (or four, or five, or like John seven) Mike Leigh films you'd never seen before. You won't be sorry.
    Metadata:
    Published as:
    Podcast    
    Status:
    Published
    Last Updated:
    10 months ago
    License:
    Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
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