The Lady in the Van
Dir: Nicholas Hytner
2015
*****
The Lady in the Van is a unique
and quirky story that could have only come from the mind of the great Alan
Bennett. It would have worked had the lady in the van been a metaphor or a
representation of a side of the author (which I thought she was at first) but
there is something quite refreshing about the fact that she was in fact a real
person. I say that because The Lady in the Van is first and foremost an Alan Bennett play,
and Alan Bennett plays are generally about Alan Bennett. The Lady in the Van is no
exception but it is amazing what you can learn about a person through someone
else. Nicholas Hytner does a great job of adapting Bennett's style
which has been fairly samey in the past. Separating the author from
the protagonist/narrator as he does is a work of genius but he makes it look
simple and effortless and it is very easy to watch. Promotion for the film was
almost insultingly misleading. Bennett is a celebrated author with fans around
the globe, he and director Nicholas Hytner clearly have loyalty and friendship
at heart and decided to give each actor from their
previous collaboration The History Boys a short cameo each.
One of those actors is James Cordon, popular among many, excluding
me. Cordon is in the film for less than thirty second but he
has equal billing to key players and a place on the
film's poster. The film's trailer made it look like a live-action
Wallace and Gromit adaptation rather than the comedy-drama masterpiece that it
is. Thankfully nothing else has been effected my meddling producers and
marketing people, the adaptation is solid (why mess with a winning formula) and
it is a joy from start to finish. Alex Jennings' portrayal of Alan Bennett is
quite extraordinary, to the point that I thought he was more
like Alan Bennett than Alan Bennett is. Maggie Smith has played Miss
Mary Shepherd/Margaret Fairchild/'The lady in the van before, once in the
original stage play (for which she was nominated for an Olivier award) and once
on the radio. It's hard to see any other actor in the part, she
is absolutely sublime in the role and it is, in my opinion, her best
performance to date. I love the way Bennett wanders into fantasy along the
story, always pointing out the scenes that didn't actually happen, reminding
the viewer that it is his story and he can do with it as he pleases. He says as
much of how he can portray Mary/Margaret now that she is dead, and after giving
the audience a warts and all description of her he finally gives her the most
elaborate of exits that she always dreamed of. Beauty and deadpan don't usually
work together but here they dance, which is pure Alan Bennett.
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