Is Anybody There?
Tuesday 2nd March 2010 @ 7:30pm

Directed by John Crowley
Language: English
Venue: Theatre Royal Wakefield
www.theatreroyalwakefield.co.uk
The tender rapport
between this film’s two leads, 76-year-old
Michael Caine and 14-year-old
Bill Milner, is reason enough to see this
sweet-natured British indie that explores the not-very-sexy topics of death
and ageing. Milner, who readers may remember as one of the two kids in ‘Son
of Rambow’, is Edward, whose parents run an old people’s home near the sea.
It looks like a retirement pad for thesps: there’s
Leslie Phillips in the corner, making crude
jokes; there’s Sylvia Syms, playing a grump; there’s
Thelma Barlow, still looking like Mavis
from ‘Coronation Street’. The year is 1987 and writer
Peter Harness is exploring his experience
of growing up in the ’80s in an environment in which blue rinses, Zimmer
frames and incontinence were as common as Rubik’s Cubes and Roland Rat.
Then Caine appears: he’s Clarence, a former magician, bitter about ageing
and initially dismissive of Edward’s childish ramblings about death and the
after-life. You see, Edward isn’t reacting well to the sight of bodybags
floating down the family stairlift and his parents are too busy to hold his
hand and explain all things spiritual: his upbeat, well-meaning mum (Anne-Marie
Duff) is juggling all sorts to keep things afloat; his dad (an
underused David Morrissey) is in mid-life-crisis mode and drooling over the
family’s teenage employee Tanya (Linzey Cocker) while sporting jumpers that
would make Gyles Brandreth blush.
It turns out Edward needs Clarence as much as Clarence needs Edward: the older man becomes a surrogate father while the child allows Clarence to rediscover some of the wonder in life and face up to his demons. Caine is terrific in the role, physically convincing and able to communicate the fading of dreams and the onset of dementia with skill. Some of the more ensemble episodes of the film, especially those involving Edward’s parents, are less interesting and well-executed, but this remains further proof, after films like ‘Last Orders’, ‘Children of Men’ and even ‘The Dark Knight’, that late Caine can be a joy to watch
http://isanybodytheremovie.com/
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