“Watching this movie made me realise how boring and thin many movies are; how they substitute plots for the fascinations of life.”
Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times, 1991
Life Is Sweet was Mike Leigh’s third film for cinema in the first two decades of a directing career spent primarily in television and the theatre. The script, devised through his famed improvisatory process, mixes food-related incidents: the opening of a restaurant, the purchase of a burger van, and the revelation of a young woman’s bulimia.
Through apparently humdrum struggles the film’s suburban Londoners, Jim Broadbent, Leigh’s then-wife Alison Steadman and their chalk-and-cheese adult twins Jane Horrocks and Claire Skinner, reveal hidden strengths.
This was Leigh’s first film with director of photography Dick Pope, subsequently a regular collaborator, and also the debut project from Thin Man Productions, which Leigh ran with his producer Simon Channing Williams until the latter’s death in 2009.
David Thewlis, who has a small role as the lover of Jane Horrocks’s Nicola, went on to become the focus of Leigh’s next feature, Naked (1993).
Life is Sweet (1990)
The urge to remain individual within a family, and the relationship between the personal and the entrepreneurial, are among the themes that inform Mike Leigh’s touching comedy.
- 1990 United Kingdom
- Directed by
- Mike Leigh
- Produced by
- Simon Channing-Williams
- Written by
- Mike Leigh
- Featuring
- Alison Steadman, Jim Broadbent, Timothy Spall
- Running time
- 103 minutes
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