Meantime Q&A | Mike Leigh in Conversation

Posted 23 Jun 2023 by George Parsons in

Part 2 of Mike Leigh and Gary Yershon’s ongoing discussion of the acclaimed director’s films begins with a screening and Q&A for his 1983 film Meantime.

A slow-burning depiction of economic degradation in Thatcher’s England, Mike Leigh’s Meantime is the culmination of the writer-director’s pioneering work in television. Unemployment is rampant in London’s working-class East End, where a middle-aged couple and their two sons languish in a claustrophobic council flat. As the brothers (Phil Daniels and Tim Roth) grow increasingly disaffected, Leigh punctuates the grinding boredom of their daily existence with tense encounters, including with a well-meaning aunt (Marion Bailey) who has managed to become middle-class and a blithering skinhead on the verge of psychosis (a scene-stealing Gary Oldman, in his first major role).

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