Thursday, 17 February 2011

Mike Leigh at the BBC
(1976)

RATING:60%
FORMAT:DVD

Disc 2

Subtle comedies of White despair that are the hallmark of LEIGH’s work to date. In Leigh-world, happiness - if it exists at all - is only fleeting or comes in spurts.

Mixed in with the lower-class archetypes is the usual middle-class envy at the poor’s apparently greater capacity for enjoying themselves. The general gormlessness and fecklessness of the males here is where so much of the humor originates and is a joy to behold.

The White middle-class characters here are shown as emotionally-overwrought hippie-types who are tiresome as all get-out because they think behaving according to highly-detailed rituals is a bulwark against the chaos of an unexamined life. One is left wondering what kind of non-nurturing childhood such people are so desperately keen to run away from.

The problem with these works is that they accurately describe retarded people, yet offer no effective resolution to their problems - nor, indeed, can the characters represented ever be any more interesting than their representations. This is drama as therapy, not as exploration or as analysis, since emotional-inbreeding is described but not really understood. Ingmar Bergman for kids.


Copyright © 2011 Frank TALKER. Permission granted to reproduce and distribute it in any format; provided that mention of the author’s Weblog (http://franktalker5.blogspot.com/) is included: E-mail notification requested. All other rights reserved.

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Science:



No science is immune to the infection of politics and the corruption of power.



Jacob Bronowski… (1908 - 74), British scientist, author. Encounter (London, July 1971).


Sleep of Reason:



The dream of reason produces monsters. Imagination deserted by reason creates impossible, useless thoughts. United with reason, imagination is the mother of all art and the source of all its beauty.



Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes… (1746-1828), Spanish painter. Caption to Caprichos, number 43, a series of eighty etchings completed in 1798, satirical and grotesque in form.


Humans & Aliens:



I am human and let nothing human be alien to me.



Terence… (circa 190-159 BC), Roman dramatist. Chremes, in The Self-Tormentor [Heauton Timorumenos], act 1, scene 1.


Führerprinzip:



One leader, one people, signifies one master and millions of slaves… There is no organ of conciliation or mediation interposed between the leader and the people, nothing in fact but the apparatus - in other words, the party - which is the emanation of the leader and the tool of his will to oppress. In this way the first and sole principle of this degraded form of mysticism is born, the Führerprinzip, which restores idolatry and a debased deity to the world of nihilism.