Life Is Sweet – 1990 | 103mins | Comedy, Drama | Colour

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Plot Synopsis

Life Is Sweet

This is life as the suburban nightmare of a lower middle-class family in the London, leisurely Andy (Jim Broadbent) runs a dilapidated mobile food stand, while upbeat wife Wendy (Alison Steadman), tries to keep charge of two outrageous daughters Natalie and Nicola. Natalie (Claire Skinner) is a laddish plumber and Nicola (Jane Horrocks) is a bulimic sex maniac. Meanwhile his mate, ambitious restaurateur Aubrey (Timothy Spall) plans to bring haute cuisine to Enfield. After a disastrous opening night at the ‘Regret Rien’, Aubrey gets drunk and abysmally attempts to seduce Wendy, who had volunteered to waitress. Yes, it’s all here, acutely observed, merciless but tender-hearted, beautifully played under Leigh’s multi-layered improvisations, and so funny it hurts; or maybe, it hurts so much, it’s funny.

Production Team

Mike Leigh: Director
Sophie Becher: Art Direction
Dick Pope: Cinematography
Lindy Hemming: Costume Design
Jon Gregory: Editing
Christine Blundell: Makeup Department
Rachel Portman: Music Score
Simon Channing-Williams: Producer
Alison Chitty: Production Design
Mike Leigh: Script
Sue Baker: Sound
Malcolm Hirst: Sound
Peter Maxwell: Sound

Cast

Alison Steadman: Wendy
Jim Broadbent: Andy
Claire Skinner: Natalie
Jane Horrocks: Nicola
Timothy Spall: Aubrey
David Thewlis: Nicola’s Lover