British filmmaker Mike Leigh began his career in the 1970s as a playwright and theater director. Later he made a number of films of varying lengths for British television and then moved into feature film production. Although well established in the U. K., he slowly gained a reputation in the United States, where, at first, his work was known to a relatively small number of filmgoers and critics. Such major films as High Hopes and Life Is Sweet attracted little attention in America. With the release of Secrets and Lies, however, the audience for Leigh's films increased dramatically.
Mike Leigh: Interviews collects published conversations from the past seven years. Not just a close-up encounter with Leigh, they also express both his unusual work style and the emotional and intellectual toughness that characterizes his distinct approach to filmmaking.
As Leigh speaks in these interviews, he reveals what is unique in his work, particularly that his films do not begin with a script. Explaining this approach, he discusses how he begins by assembling a few actors who talk, improvise, create characters, and gradually develop a story that contains their actions. Before the camera rolls, a tentative script is set, but many months may pass before the script is finished and the shooting begins.
Among those he talks with in these interviews are Jay Carr of the Boston Globe, Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times, and Judy Stone, the longtime critic of the San Francisco Chronicle. Leigh is asked to discuss politics, social attitudes, and religion--all of which give his films a unique signature.
I guess not totally the fault of the editor here because he doesn’t give many interviews. But this is basically a compendium of a couple of years in the 90s where Leigh was giving more interviews around Career Girls and Secrets and Lies. Great films, to be sure, but very few of these interviews probe beyond the surface. Inessential reading that can be picked up in a single interview, like the Kenneth Turan one.
I loved reading all of these interviews and write-ups about Mike Leigh and his films! He's become a favorite, and I've learned so much by reading about how he crafts a story and watching his final pieces. Now, I need to find interviews and reviews for all of his films from Career Girls to the present!