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High Hopes

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United Kingdom · 1988
Rated PG · 1h 48m
Director Mike Leigh
Starring Phil Davis, Ruth Sheen, Edna Doré, Philip Jackson
Genre Comedy, Drama

This film focuses on the lives of a haughty upper-class couple, an elderly working-class but Tory-voting woman, and a social climbing woman who lives with her slimy husband. At the center of this all is a working-class couple, Cyril and Shirley. Shirley just wants to have a baby, but Cyril just wants to read Marx and imagine a better world.

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60

Variety by

Leigh builds a slight story intended to be a microcosm of today’s London.

88

Miami Herald by Bill Cosford

Leigh is obviously a major talent of the English film resurgence, which may already have peaked but nonetheless offers hopes of its own. His loose way of making films -- the wandering camera, the scenes that seem to invent themselves as they go along -- somehow accommodates a genuine comic intelligence, which usually requires the tightest of controls. [2 June 1989, p.7]

100

Washington Post by Hal Hinson

Leigh has fashioned a limber style of political commentary that is part documentary, part cartoon and wholly novel in the movies.

88

Boston Globe by Jay Carr

Never settling for mere irony, High Hopes becomes a small banner of sanity and good humor among the social ruins. Leigh never shies away from his unflinching dead-end class view of contemporary London. Nor does he wallow in '60s nostalgia. Which is part of the reason his passionate, life-embracing High Hopes is so exhilarating. [31 Mar. 1989, p.30]

100

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

High Hopes is an alive and challenging film, one that throws our own assumptions and evasions back at us. Leigh sees his characters and their lifestyles so vividly, so mercilessly and with such a sharp satirical edge, that the movie achieves a neat trick: We start by laughing at the others, and end by feeling uncomfortable about ourselves.

80

Los Angeles Times by Sheila Benson

The actors, many of whom are part of a loose Mike Leigh stock company, are miraculously deft at erasing that line between performing and being.

88

Portland Oregonian by Ted Mahar

The characters and their situations, while perfectly credible and funny on the simplest literal level, surely add up to something like a subtly farcical apocalyptic satire. [18 April 1989, p.D4]

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