Genre:
Drama/Comedy
Director: Jeremy Brock
Cast: Rupert Grint, Laura Linney, Julie Walters,
Nicholas Farrell, Oliver Milburn, Michelle Duncan, Tamsin
Eggerton
RunTime: 1 hr 38 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: NC-16 (Some Coarse Language)
Official Website: http://www.sonyclassics.com/drivinglessons/
Opening Day: 26 June 2008
Synopsis:
A coming of age story about Ben (Grint) an awkward and shy
teenage boy trying to escape from the influence of his domineering
devotely Christian mother Laura (Linney). His world changes
when he begins working as an assistant to retired, second-rate,
alcoholic actress Evie (Walters) Much to his mother's displeasure,
Ben and Evie go camping together, and he's later tricked into
driving her to Edinburgh for a poetry reading - convincing
him by pretending that she's near death.
Movie Review:
The characters in Jeremy Brock’s “Driving Lessons”
never seem to realise a better way out of their predicaments
unless it comes on the backend of humiliation. They feel trapped
in their own inadequacies while groping for pat answers for
their insecurities on growing up, growing old and growing
apart. The generational gap closes through absurdly derivative
ideas on moving on and moving out. Revolving around the misadventures
of a carrot-topped amateur poet Ben (Rupert Grint), a sad
sack vicar’s (Nicholas Farrell) desperately unhappy
teenage son beset by a domineering mum (Laura Linney) and
a batty old ex-actress employer (Julie Walters in a reunion
of sorts with Grint, both filming in between their roles as
mother and son in the Harry Potter films), the film lazily
repurposes trite life lessons and trivialises them by punching
them up into clichés and easy gags.
Evie
Walton (the former actress) staggers about her garden, cursing
at her plants and very likely drunk out of her mind. On other
days, she’s on the ground of a dank living room or hurling
into the sink, once again being quite intoxicated. She puts
up an ad in the local church bulletin (because you can’t
very well trust just anybody to not take advantage of a single
woman) for help running errands. Forced into a summer job
by his unyieldingly stern mother, Ben picks up after Evie,
follows her to the shops, and much to the chagrin of his mother,
illegally chauffeurs her to Edinburgh for a literary festival
– all while the film delights in forcibly pointing to
the role reversals of responsibility between the defiantly
indulgent old woman and the shy, insecure and unnaturally
solemn teenager. Evie is the sort of bossily droll character
that Walters has made a late career from; it’s a composite
of what you’d find in “Billy Elliot”, “Calendar
Girls”, “Mickybo and Me”, and the Harry
Potter franchise.
Quite
interestingly, the film does posit an undeniably villainous
figure in his mother, within the context of a boy turning
into a man. Laura Linney’s prim British accent is impeccable,
and her presence and disquieting menace rings similar to her
role in “The Nanny Diaries”. The film intriguingly
gives her a sort of dislikable hypocrisy in her motivations
when she’s beating down Ben’s confidence as a
man as he tries to release himself from her tentacles. Religious
for the sake of being a model Christian while indiscreetly
making come-hither eyes at a handsome parishioner, the film’s
not exactly kind to the church in its description of Ben’s
home life, what with Ben’s father being as feeble at
the dinner table as he is on the pulpits.
Jeremy
Brockman makes his directorial debut here, but has been a
successful screenplay writer (he penned “The Last King
of Scotland” and the marvellous “Charlotte Gray”).
This script claims, by its production notes, to be inspired
by the director’s own formative experiences working
one summer for a mercurial actress, one Dame Peggy Ashcroft.
But its general genesis ends up anything but personal, or
in any case, even original in the least. The story involving
a young, disillusioned person who finds hope and comfort in
the presence of weary, standoffish seniors is an unendingly
popular premise. The different iterations of this basic idea
find its own inherent humour and friction in this mentor/student
dynamic. Clumsily plotted and overbearingly quirky to the
point of fracture, Brockman callously disembarks from the
intimate travails of manhood for the outlandishly minstrel.
Movie Rating:
(Silly
film with no surprises, and no real connection to any of its
characters)
Review by Justin Deimen
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