Staunton's method serves Vera Drake so powerfully that a BAFTA must surely beckon.
Vera Drake (2004)
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Reviews Counted:153
Fresh:141
Rotten:12
Average Rating:7.9/10
Consensus: With a piercingly powerful performance by Imelda Staunton, Vera Drake brings teeming humanity to the controversial subject of abortion.
Theatrical Release:Oct 10, 2004 Limited
Box Office: $3,627,889
Synopsis: Mike Leigh produces another devastating masterpiece with the heartbreaking VERA DRAKE. Imelda Staunton is the title character, beloved wife of Stan (Phil Davis) and mother of Sid (Daniel Mays) and... Mike Leigh produces another devastating masterpiece with the heartbreaking VERA DRAKE. Imelda Staunton is the title character, beloved wife of Stan (Phil Davis) and mother of Sid (Daniel Mays) and Ethel (Alex Kelly). Vera spends her days cleaning houses for money and looking in on elderly and sick neighbors out of the kindness of her heart. She even attempts to be a matchmaker for her daughter, inviting a lonely neighbor, Reg (Eddie Marsan), to see if he might be a perfect match for the introverted Ethel. But Vera performs another duty that her family doesn't know about, one that is deeply frowned upon by society. When tragedy befalls a young client of Vera's, the truth comes out, forcing her family to see their mother in an entirely different light. Staunton gives a towering performance and, in typical Mike Leigh fashion, the story, characters, and script were built from a grueling and intricate improvisation process, resulting in a film that burns with heart-wrenching sincerity. Rather than take a heavy-handed approach towards his controversial subject matter, Leigh heroically remains non-judgmental, delivering an achingly humanistic drama that will linger with audiences long after they leave the theater. [More]
Starring: Imelda Staunton, Philip Davis, Peter Wight, Eddie Marsan
Starring: Imelda Staunton, Philip Davis, Peter Wight, Eddie Marsan, Adrian Scarborough, Sally Hawkins, Ruth Sheen
Director: Mike Leigh
Director: Mike Leigh
Screenwriter: Mike Leigh
Producer: Simon Williams, Alain Sarde
Composer: Andrew Dickson
Studio: Fine Line Features
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Release:
Mar 29, 2005
Reviews for Vera Drake
As in all of Mike Leigh's films, there's not a bad performance in the lot.
Vera Drake is soul-stirringly good, but it's occasionally a little overt in staging its themes and insights.
[T]his can't be called naturalism ... Vera has to represent the bad medicine that fills the gap for low-income women, the bad medicine that results inevitably from bad law.
The character of Vera ... is the argument for regarding the issue [of abortion] with an indispensible caring selflessness.
Leigh takes the steady pulse of one woman’s quietly remarkable life and turns it into one of the most absorbing, memorable films of the year.
I found Vera Drake most interesting in its portrayal of a woman in a crisis, and the subsequent emotional reactions it provokes in her and her family.
Hints about America's future under Bush may theoretically be unearthed in Great Britain's past, or at least the past as catalogued by Mike Leigh in his latest gem.
This is Staunton's moment in the sun. Her portrayal of the disintegration of Vera's spirit is wrenching.
Vera Drake finds an artist of Leigh’s sincerity and seriousness at the top of his game. It’s the best film of its type since In America
Every detail of the film breathes with authenticity, fully creating the grimy, working-class world of post-war London, and the characters behave like real people.
Tough and grim, Vera Drake is not as brilliant as Naked but it's an emotionally harrowing tale that admirably avoids judging or condescendeing to its characters
There's a gentleness and sweetness to Vera Drake that belies how edgy, controversial and ugly some of the material is.
Moves slowly but stays engaging, guided by the storyteller’s masterful touch.
Another bleak, harrowingly realistic drama from Mike Leigh highlighted by a phenomenal star turn by Imelda Staunton in the title role.
Leigh's gift in Vera Drake is that he doesn't help us decide what to think of Vera, but he does help us understand her.
In postwar Britain, Vera Drake helps the needy and pays for it dearly in Mike Leigh's underplayed and overwhelming drama.
All the actors so completely fade away that you come out of the film thinking you've seen the real people, not players reciting a script.
Latest News for Vera Drake
February 19, 2009:
Georgia Groome - Fresh Talent on RT
She was 13 when she made her big screen debut in Paul Andrew Williams' affecting drama London to Brighton, and drew stellar notices from critics as a young victim of child... More...
February 03, 2009:
RT Interview: Golden Globe Winner Sally Hawkins
After winning Best Actress at the Berlin Film Festival, the Golden Globes, and a score of critics' circles for her ebullient performance in Mike Leigh's Happy-Go-Lucky,... More...
April 10, 2007:
Imelda Staunton Talks About How to Play a "Potter" Villain
It's probably not all that flattering when you're hired to play a character who's described as "short, ugly, and toadlike," but that won't stop British actress Imelda... More...
February 03, 2006:
Potter Part 5 Gets Production Underway
Principal photography will commence February 6 at England’s Leavesden Studios on "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," the fifth film adaptation of J.K.... More...
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