Close

Business FinderBrowse these Citysearch® Categories for products & services in your area.



Search Movies for

Popular Searches Baby Mama, Balmoral Cineplex, Movie trailers

50 recommendations

I recommend this...
Tip Sheet

Year Released 2008

Duration 118

Happy-Go-Lucky

Editorial Review

Poppy is a London primary school teacher who over a few weeks one spring learns to drive and embarks on a new romance.

Image: Happy-Go-Lucky

Movie Summary

Movie Genre:

Drama

Rated:

M

Director:

Mike Leigh

Starring:

Alexis Zegerman, Andrea Riseborough, Eddie Marsan, Sally Hawkins




Editorial Review

It is a fairly common misconception that crying on demand is one of the hardest things an actor can do. It's not. Sneezing convincingly, for example, is tougher. As is laughing. And by that we mean proper laughing - laughing with your eyes, to paraphrase Roald Dahl, rather than with your mouth. In this sense, Mike Leigh regular Sally Hawkins delivers a remarkable performance as Poppy, a woman who greets every situation with a smile, a joke and a guffaw, as if she's hooked on nitrous oxide.

Towards the end of the film, her flatmate advises her, “You can't make everyone 'appy all the time,” to which she replies, “Yeah, but there's no 'arm in tryin'.” Some would disagree, and that's the driving dynamic of Leigh's latest film: in an insular, insecure urban society, what do we make of someone like Poppy? She certainly challenges the assumptions of those who encounter her. She's not stupid, she's not naive, she's not even self-deceptive - we uncover no dark soul broiling beneath the gleaming smile and dizzy mannerisms.

You spend the movie half-expecting Leigh to punish her for her persistent frivolity, yet while his dramatic constructions certainly test Poppy's bounce, it's less a case of the world trying to grind her down than her trying, for want of a better phrase, to grind the world up. This is most evident in the driving lesson episodes, with Marsan's invective-spitting misanthrope set up as the hate-mongering yang to Poppy's mirthful ying.

Still, those who only know Leigh by his (unfair) reputation as a miserablist might be surprised to find that ultimately, this is a genuine feelgood film. There's a good chance that you'll wish you could face all life's tribulations Poppy-style. You might even be tempted to give it a go.


Mike Leigh draws a bravura performance out of Sally Hawkins, and she in return makes Poppy one of Leigh’s best characters yet.

Michael Adams

Do something with this page

Tell us what you think

At a glance...

50

Recommendations so far

Click to recommend to others

Got Something to say? required field



1000 characters max.


Subscribe

Get Citysearch's ®: SubscribeNewsletter