Like Monet with another clump of water lilies, Mike Leigh has returned with a new family-and-friends group portrait, a movie in which the distant sob or throb of sadness is never entirely absent.
With its immersive sweetness and gentleness, Another Year is another utterly confident and unhurried ensemble picture from Leigh, containing his distinctively extended dialogue scenes of unpointed ordinariness and a lowered narrative heartbeat to which you have to make a conscious effort to adjust.
His previous film, Happy-Go-Lucky, tilted the tone to the “sweet” end of the bittersweet spectrum; Another Year takes us in the opposite direction and, to my ear, the neo-Dickensian cartooniness of his language, perceptibly normalised in recent films, is here lessened still further.
Again, Leigh uses repertory casting: Jim Broadbent and Ruth Sheen play Tom and Gerri — the joke is alluded to once, by someone else, with a giggle, and then forgotten. They are a happily married middle-aged couple content with their lives, fulfilled in their careers, serene at the thought of reasonably imminent retirement and jointly devoted to their allotment. Spanning one year the movie follows the passing of the four seasons with the resulting crop of fruit and veg.
Tom is a geologist and land surveyor and Gerri is a counsellor; Imelda Staunton appears in a tantalisingly brief cameo as a patient suffering from insomnia and depression. They have a grown-up son, Joe (Oliver Maltman), who has evidently inherited his dad’s breezy, sarky, unreflective sense of humour, and whose still-unmarried condition concerns the parents not one whit.
Lost souls
Despite or perhaps because of their contentment, Tom and Gerri’s home has become a magnet for lost and damaged souls. Tom’s old mate Ken (Peter Wight) is an overweight boozer with unresolved issues and then there is Mary, played by Lesley Manville, a secretary in the GP’s office where Gerri works.
Mary is the character who kicks the narrative mechanism into gear. She is a lonely divorcee, superficially sparky and cheerful, but parasitically dependent on her friends, and putting a tragically unconvincing brave face on the awful way her personal life is turning out.
(She is a Mr Hyde to the Dr Jekyll of Sally Hawkins’s Poppy in Happy-Go-Lucky; like Poppy she takes up driving — with far less happy results.) The hysteric quiver in Mary’s needy, wheedling laughter has a cry-for-help timbre, disturbing because at some level Mary needs someone to see through her pantomime.
The neurotic music of Manville’s delivery creates a plaintive, tragic dissonance with the film’s actual musical soundtrack, a thoughtful melody with oboe and classical guitar featured prominently.
As the movie proceeds, the intensity of her affection for Gerri and Tom’s family takes the drama in an increasingly painful direction and yet the film’s note of anxiety remains muffled until the drama is blindsided by the explicit, violent anger of a sequence late in the narrative.
Since this film was shown at Cannes earlier this year, a division of opinion has emerged among audiences about its two lead characters and I have found myself shuttling between these views. Some think they are simply what they seem: sane, nice people and, instead of being on the alert for irony, we could and should simply admire them.
But there is an alternative view: namely, that Gerri and Tom are not all that admirable, but subtly complacent and self-satisfied and we are misunderstanding the parasitism of their relationship with Mary.
Could it be that it is Gerri and Tom who are addicted to the cosy feeling of superiority that poor mixed-up Mary and Ken give to them, while they sympathise, roll their eyes at each other and easily pour these poor souls drink after drink after drink?
Either way, Leigh and his cast have created a network of relationships that is more complex than it first appears. Yet even here the conclusion might simply be that Gerri and Tom are adults who treat their friends as adults, no matter how damaged they appear to be: adults who must make their own decisions. Or perhaps it is that there is a quantum economy of happiness in any group of people: the happiness of some means the unhappiness in others.
The power of Another Year creeps up on you by stealth; its dramatic idiom is admittedly mannered in the Leigh style, but it’s shy of caricature and designed consistently to abrade the audience’s consciousness without irritating — fingertips down the blackboard, not fingernails. And, yes, still an acquired taste. But I found it a deeply involving, intelligent, compassionate drama of the sort only Leigh can create.