Vera Drake Movie Review
Vera Drake Review

"Vera Drake" Overview

Rating: R
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Mike LeighProducer : Simon Channing Williams,Alain Sarde
Screenwiter : Mike Leigh
Starring : Imelda Staunton,Richard Graham,Eddie Marsan,Alex Kelly,Daniel Mays,Phil Davis,Adrian Scarborough,Heather Craney,Ruth Sheen
Known for developing scripts out of improvisational exercises, Mike Leigh’s
gift for getting incredible performances out of actors is impressive. His
character-driven pieces are consistently provocative and engaging, though they
may also leave you feeling depressed at their insistence on sticking with the
reality of how circumstances play out versus tying together a neat,
entertaining ending.
Vera Drake is no exception to this practice. Set in working-class London in the
1950s, it explores the path of a middle-aged woman who performs illegal
abortions to young women in need. Vera (Imelda Staunton) is one of those truly
kind-hearted souls who constantly helps out anyone and everyone around her. It’
s hard to imagine that someone that positive and giving may exist, but her
charm and energetic encouragement easily win you over as genuine. She, her
husband Stan (Phil Davis), and their two adult children share a cramped but
warm apartment together.
The first half of the film is emotionally binding as we watch Vera care for a
variety of neighbors and her mother and as she convinces local Reg (Eddie
Marsan) to come by and be fed. Juxtaposed with her brief occupational scenes of
cleaning for unhappy rich people and the discomfort of Stan’s brother Frank
(Adrian Scarborough) with his materialistic wife Joyce (Heather Craney), you
quietly get the sense of how simple happiness can be when you appreciate the
small connecting moments as in Vera’s household.
The scenes of Vera with her patients are truly gripping in their variety of
clients, the reactions of these women making such a huge decision, and Vera’s
steadying, empathetic nature. Instead of pushing some morality envelope of
politics on the audience, Leigh wisely chooses to keep the much-debated
operation within the confines of individual crisis.
Unfortunately, after Vera is apprehended when one of her patients becomes ill,
the film falls into the clutches of watching Vera weep and the tediousness of
London law. There are still a few powerful scenes, such as when Stan is asking
their son to forgive Vera despite his own anger, but the emotional intensity
that was so strongly built in the beginning falters with repeated close-ups of
Vera crying.
This is especially disappointing as there are several tangents left
unacknowledged after new information has come to the surface. During
interrogation Vera finds out that her best friend from childhood was selling
Vera’s services unbeknownst to her, when Vera wouldn’t have been charging for
it to begin with. We never see or hear of Lily (Ruth Sheen) again, nor do we
learn any punishment she must suffer, from either Vera or the law, based on her
actions. To portray such an extreme betrayal and not follow through, after
spending so much extra time on legal exactitudes, loses an enormous mental
investment in the events.
Also a letdown is some of the character interaction in that you don’t feel any
chemistry between the players, as well written as the dialogue might be. Frank
and Joyce don’t really feel like a couple, and their scenes of her wanting more
stuff while Frank grasps to keep his relationship with his brother together are
repetitive and aggravating. It’s also surprising that Lily and Vera are
supposed to have been best friends for such a long period of time with their
extremely divergent personality traits and Lily’s cold conversational attitude.
But even given its focus faults, Vera Drake is still the work of a talented
writer-director who manages to intelligently capture a difficult subject so
rarely covered in film. Beautifully shot and impeccably acted with human
interaction that remains easy to relate to though taking place in a different
era, Vera Drake will keep your mind reeling well after leaving the theater.
(Those interested in a similar story might consider Claude Chabrol's A Story of
Women.)
Reviewed as part of the 2004 New York Film Festival.
Vera! Vera! What has become of you?
Reviewer: Rachel Gordon





