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A keen observer of manners and mores, Mike Leigh has been hailed as a celebrator of ordinary people, yet it wasn’t until relatively recently that audiences have been able to appreciate the full body of his work. In discussing all his films from Bleak Moments and High Hopes through Naked, the Oscar-nominated Secrets and Lies and Topsy Turvy, to All or Nothing, Garry Watson considers this claim, examining the films'influence and their effect.
At the same time, he takes on the very concepts of the real and the ordinary in regard to Leigh’s work, challenging much perceived thinking among critics and moviegoers alike. To what category does the director’s work really belong? Is it British Realism? The avant garde? Through careful textual detail and wider social and literary comparison with the works of Charles Dickens and T. S. Eliot, he argues ultimately for the aritistic and cultural significance of Leigh’s work as one of Britian’s most respected filmmakers.
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A keen observer of manners and mores, Mike Leigh has been hailed as a celebrator of ordinary people, yet it wasn’t until relatively recently that audiences have been able to appreciate the full body of his work. In discussing all his films from Bleak Moments and High Hopes through Naked, the Oscar-nominated Secrets and Lies and Topsy Turvy, to All or Nothing, Garry Watson considers this claim, examining the films'influence and their effect.
At the same time, he takes on the very concepts of the real and the ordinary in regard to Leigh’s work, challenging much perceived thinking among critics and moviegoers alike. To what category does the director’s work really belong? Is it British Realism? The avant garde? Through careful textual detail and wider social and literary comparison with the works of Charles Dickens and T. S. Eliot, he argues ultimately for the aritistic and cultural significance of Leigh’s work as one of Britian’s most respected filmmakers.