By James Bowman on 10.24.06 @ 12:02AM
Fine acting, likable characters, and...too many of the usual stereotypes.
Driving Lessons at its best is a charming, funny and
sometimes touching family drama starring Julie Walters and Rupert
Grint of the Harry Potter films, now brought together again by
writer and director, Jeremy Brock. Too bad it's not more often at
its best. Mr. Grint plays Ben, the 17-year-old son of a priest of
the Church of England (Nicholas Farrell) and a domineering mother
(Laura Linney) who is supposed to be giving Ben driving lessons but
who uses these as a pretext for carrying on an affair with another
priest (Oliver Milburn). Ben goes to a Christian school and is
himself a believing Christian, but he is becoming more and more
troubled by his mother's behavior and by the inability of his meek
and mild father to stand up to her. "Sometimes," says dad after a
particularly vicious put-down by his wife, "your mother can be a
little --" but then he trails off and goes back to his bird
book.
For her part, mother is a sanctimonious moralizer whose
strictness with Ben is a sort of compensation for her own moral
laxness. An inveterate doer of good deeds, presumably as a cover
for her bad ones, she has strong opinions about everyone and
everything. When she berates Ben for coming home late, he says:
"There was no place to call from. If I had a mobile --"
"Mobiles give you cancer," snaps mum.
Ben finds a part-time job as a home-help to an old lady called
Evie (Miss Walters), who is (or was) an actress and who Ben thinks
is one of the grand dames of the English stage. Evie's
sometimes-endearing, sometimes-scary eccentricities are meant as a
contrast with Miss Linney's monster-mum, the religious believer who
is as phony as Evie the actress is genuine. The problem is that
both women are made into caricatures by the comparison, the Wicked
Witch and the Good Witch of this North London Oz. To some extent it
doesn't matter because Ben, like Dorothy, is really the focus of
our attention. The two women are just his terrifyingly opposed,
17-year-old fantasies of female adulthood -- fantasies which are
finally tamed and rendered harmless with the help of an obliging
Scottish lass called Bryony (Michelle Duncan). At least we are
encouraged to think so when Ben, having been cowed into playing the
part of a tree in his mother's latest Sunday School pageant,
finally rebels against her: "I don't want to be a tree no more. I'm
gonna be a man."
Well, good for you, dear, but that is rather what we expected of
you. The young man with "the soul of a poet" who is damaged into
sensitivity by either weak or dominating parents -- or, in Ben's
case, by one of each -- is a cliche that goes back to the 1950s and
movies like Rebel Without a Cause or Tea and
Sympathy. It looks out of place in the context of the 21st
century's model of solicitous parenting, relentlessly dedicated to
the offspring's self-fulfillment rather than some abstract model of
ideal behavior. Driving Lessons's attempt to meet the
dramatic need for an old-fashioned, oppressive home life by
adopting a more recent movie cliche, that of the vicious, stupid,
or hypocritical religious believer, strikes me as rather a
desperate measure. Certainly, mothers like Ben's are very far from
being the norm in what I know of contemporary London.
Moreover, she is potentially a much more interesting character
than Mr. Brock allows her to be. Among her good deeds, for
instance, is inviting into the family's home a clearly insane
person, Mr. Fincham (Jim Norton), who ran over his wife with a car.
There seems no ulterior motive behind her wish "to help him in his
recovery," so what is it about? Good deeds ought to be taken
seriously, especially the crazy ones, but Mr. Fincham is only a
running gag. "You may have noticed that Mr. Fincham is dressing in
my clothes," says mother to Ben one day when he comes home. "It's
part of his recovery." Likewise, I would find it a lot more
interesting if it were something more than just one more instance
of mum's hypocrisy when she says to her son: "Whatever happens
behind these walls, Ben, we're God's ambassadors. We show the world
a smiling face." This is not a contemptible impulse.
There are, of course, many more human touches to Miss Walters's
Evie. Her attempts to manipulate Ben look much more real than his
mother's tyranny, and when he is browbeaten into taking her to a
poetry reading in Edinburgh, we can't resist the poignancy of his
discovery that, so far from being a grand dame, Evie's most famous
role was on a daytime soap opera during the 1980s called "Shipping
Magnates." Tactlessly, Bryony greets her by gushing: "I know all
your catch phrases: 'I'm a woman, not an oil tanker.' You're huge
on the gay scene."
"Am I?" she replies weakly. She then has to explain to Ben: "I
don't suppose you're familiar with the idea of kitsch?"
I think she means camp but, either way, Ben is allowed to
preserve his non-kitschy, non-campy illusions about her and so to
stake his claim to being the poet that she believes him to be.
There is a nice irony in the fact that Julie Walters really
is one of the grand dames of the English stage, or at
least of the British film industry -- though as yet Her Majesty has
only seen fit to award her the Order of the British Empire, and not
to make her an (official) Dame. Though she is only 56, her
performance here as a woman who must be at least 70 may finally put
her over the top.
topics:
Movies, Oil