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Hard Labour

United Kingdom

1973

70 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
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DIR Mike Leigh

PROD Tony Garnett

SCR Mike Leigh

DP Tony Pierce-Roberts

CAST Liz Smith, Clifford Kershaw, Bernard Hill, Alison Steadman, Ben Kingsley

ED Christopher Rowlands

Synopsis

This dolefully funny and devastatingly moving examination of societal and familial roles, Leigh’s first television film, is an understated and thoroughly authentic feeling portrait of a working class Mancunian family, taking particular notice of its put-upon, emotionally broken mother. — The One-Line Review

Director

Original

Mike Leigh

One of contemporary Britain’s most renowned directors, Mike Leigh is known for his depictions of the dramas inherent in the everyday lives of regular people. Often compared to compatriot Ken Loach for his emphasis on “slice-of-life” realism (a comparison Leigh has deemed inaccurate, as his films, unlike Loach’s, have no absolute political agenda), Leigh makes films remarkable for their level-headed, unsensational portrayals of topics that would become four-hankie “message” melodramas in the hands of most Hollywood directors.
Born February 20, 1943, in Salford, Manchester, Leigh originally wanted to go into acting. While training at London’s Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, however, he found himself drawn toward directing and writing, and he eventually transferred to the London Film School. He began his career on the stage, with two of his most important works, The Box Play and Bleak Moments, brought to life through collaborative experimentation during rehearsals. The latter play… read more

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richmondhill

14Jan12

Deliciously dour early Leigh with a feeling that the sky is permanently leaden and only six-feet above your head. As ever there’s the irritating Leigh disdain for aspiration, but that’s somewhat held at bay in a circus of characters who feel rather like chickens scrabbling about eking out a miserable living. Can you imagine such a bleak treatise on the human lot being broadcast at peak-time on a major network now?

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