Blogs at Amazon

« Armchair Commentary Sweepstakes: Wi | Main | "Howard the Duck": Best DVDs of Mar »

Happy-Go-Lucky: Best DVDs of March 2009

HappyGoLucky What it is: Academy Award nominee Mike Leigh, delivers the delightfully fresh and cheerful comedy Happy-Go-Lucky. Free-spirited and effervescent, Poppy is a schoolteacher whose unstoppable optimism guides her life. Bubbling forth with giggles, laughter and jokes, life's a bowl of cherries even when she comes across a few pits. Whether it's a cranky driving teacher or a fiery flamenco instructor, Poppy embraces life on the sunny side of the street. It's a joyous, feel-good film you'll find irresistible.

Why It's Significant: Because Sally Hawkins won the Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Motion Picture -Movie or Comedy this year and she was so moved by the honor that she could barely get through her speech. It was so sweet that Emma Thompson even offered to get on stage and help her. Happy-Go-Lucky is a nice change of pace, an unusually happy main character who keeps running into obstacles in life and yet seems to maintain her optimism despite it all. The film didn't get as much buzz as it may have deserved in the states while in theaters so it is worth checking out on DVD. Check out the clip below of Sally Hawkins where she reflects on what she learned from her character Poppy.


Amazon.com Review:
Mike Leigh has made a career out of unusual films--who else would make a biopic about Gilbert & Sullivan?--but Happy-Go-Lucky may be his most unusual yet: A movie about a woman who is almost compulsively cheerful. Poppy (Sally Hawkins, star of the 2007 miniseries of Persuasion) may at first seem like the most annoying human being alive. She can't help but try to get a smile from someone who's ignoring her. When her bicycle gets stolen, she shrugs it off and decides to learn how to drive, which leads her to form a strange sparring relationship with her frustrated driving instructor, Scott (Eddie Marsan). Meanwhile, she takes flamenco lessons, visits with her squabbling family, tries to help a troubled boy at the school where she teaches, and encounters a homeless man--but this bland catalogue of events doesn't capture how Poppy's relentless optimism acts as a rorschach test to the people around her, reflecting back their worst or best feelings about themselves. Poppy, whose natural impulse is to empathize, discovers she needs to draw boundaries between herself and a world that wants to interpret her cheerfulness in unintended ways. The result is a unique movie experience, one that defies conventional notions of what's dramatic yet grows more absorbing with every moment. Just as it's hard to imagine anyone liking Poppy at the start of Happy-Go-Lucky, it's hard to imagine that anyone doesn't care about her by the movie's end. --Bret Fetzer


-Meredith

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00e54ed05fc288330112790b0d9728a4

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Happy-Go-Lucky: Best DVDs of March 2009:

Comments

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In.

Armchair Commentary™ Contributors

February 2012

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29