Driving Lessons



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Driving Lessons

 Driving Lessons

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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Sony
EAN: 0043396170919
Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Sony Pictures Classics
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures Classics
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Sony Pictures Classics
Region Code: 99
Release Date: July 03, 2007
Running Time: 98 minutes
Sales Rank: 10437
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Theatrical Release Date: October 13, 2006




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Editorial Review:

Product Description:
Oscar® nominee Laura Linney (Kinsey) stars as Laura Marshall, an overzealous, evangelical Christian do-gooder who fills her home with down-and-out boarders, including a senile, cross-dressing murderous mute. Desperate to expand his horizons, Laura’s shy teenage son Ben (Rupert Grint, of Harry Potter fame) lands a job tending to self-proclaimed 'Dame' Evie Walton (Oscar® nominee Julie Walters, Billy Elliot), an over-the-hill actress with the mouth of a drunken sailer and an insatiable lust for life. The battle for Ben’s soul begins as Evie shanghais Ben away from his repressive roots and takes him on an adventure that transforms him from boy to man. A winning entry at the 2006 Moscow International Film Festival, Driving Lessons is an experience Stephen Farber of Movieline calls 'a delightful coming-of-age story.'

Amazon.com:
More down-to-earth than Auntie Mame, Driving Lessons imparts the same simple, but enduring message—be yourself. In the directorial debut from screenwriter Jeremy Brock (Mrs. Brown), 17-year-old Ben (Harry Potter's Rupert Grint, sluggish yet sympathetic) lives with his vicar father, Robert (Nicholas Farrell), and pious mother, Laura (Laura Linney doing a passable, but inconsistent British accent), in a tree-shaded London suburb. Soft-spoken Ben writes poems and looks forward to passing his driver's test. When his mother encourages him to get a job, he becomes an assistant to retired actress Evie Walton (Billy Elliot's Julie Walters, hunched up to look elderly). He finds her overbearing at first. Still, Evie is preferable to Laura, who may do volunteer work with her husband's parishioners, including bizarre boarder Mr. Fincham (Jim Norton), but also cheats on him with Reverend Peter (Oliver Milburn) and engages her resentful son in the subterfuge. Then Evie tricks Ben into driving her to Edinburgh for a poetry reading, where he learns to assert himself and she learns to put the dramatics on hold—at least for a few minutes. Ben also loses his virginity to a woman he just met, sending a secondary message some parents might not appreciate (the film's sprinklings of profanity earned it a PG-13). Driving Lessons itself seems stranded between coming-of-age story and character study. Ironically, Farrell gives the most convincing performance as Ben's bird-loving father. Engaging if uneven, this parable about hypocrisy and self-expression might have been more interesting if presented from his perspective. --Kathleen C. Fennessy















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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - JEREMY BROCK, OPUS 1
*** 2006. Written and directed by Jeremy Brock. London. Ben Marshall's father is a minister and his mother a woman more interested in the social activities of the parish than in Ben's life. So when Ben meets Evie Walton, an aging actress, he also finds in her an attentive friend who'll help him to become an adult. Nothing really original in this film but noteworthy performances by Laura Linney and, above all, by Julie Walters as the alcoholic Evie Walton. The satirical description of the domestic life of a religious British family is also funny at times. In short, DRIVING LESSONS is a coming of age movie worth a viewing. Not bad but already forgotten.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Awkward, coming-of-age dramedy
I watched Driving Lessons, starring Rupert Grint, Laura Linney, and and Julie Walters, this week. Though it definitely had its maudlin/trite moments, it's worth seeing for Julie Walters' great performances and to take a look at what Grint can do minus his Hogwarts wand.

Grint plays Ben, a 17-ish young man with an overbearing mother (Linney, though it's not her best work). Ben's mom, a priest's wife, makes it her personal mission to take care of all the aged people in their neighborhood, and she enlists Ben's help in caring for them. She also demands a strict schedule of driving lessons (administered by herself, of course) so that Ben can earn his license (which has been, thus far, elusive). Finally, she suggests that Ben get a summer job so that he can contribute his income to helping another one of his mother's projects - an older man who accidentally ran over his wife and is now living with them until he "recovers."

In this suffocating environment, Ben takes a job as the assistant to an aging actress, Evie (Walters). Evie is the original free spirit, mixed with equal parts vanity, insecurity, short temper, and loneliness. The two are oddly compatible, and Ben soon begins learning all kinds of things about life from Evie's quick one-liners and current struggles.

Though I thought the script could have been a bit tighter, and I thought that Grint's character could have undergone more meaningful change, I liked this film. Walters is amazing in it, and she clearly ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Better with the Coreys
I found it mysterious that they even call the movie DRIVING LESSONS, implying that young Rupert Grint's mission in life is to get his drivers license, and then they just sort of forget about his quest, so that by the end of the movie, you see him walking up a big hill and we argued about whether or not that means he failed in life or he succeeded? Did he discover that driving isn't so great? Or had he transcended his desires and was on to something new, courtesy of Dame Evey Walton (played by the irrepressible Julie Walters just as if Rosalind Russell had never essayed the part years ago, in AUNTIE MAME, and just as if elderly Ruth Gordon had never fallen in love with young Bud Cort years ago, in HAROLD AND MAUDE).

They should box up all of Julie Walters' scenes and use them to show young actors what unbridled scene-stealing is all about. Did she ever figure out it her character, Dame Evey Walton, is actually a dame or not, actually mad or not, actually dying or not, actually talented or not? Perhaps the screenplay and director dictated a fatal indecision about all these questions, in the name of keeping us guessing, but Walters' performance suffers because she doesn't have a bottom line, just a vicious need to surprise and outglow her competition. I used to think that Lily Tomlin singing with the black gospel choir in NASHVILLE was the last word in racialized exoticism, but Julie Walters makes Lily Tomlin seem like Mahalia Jackson.

As for Laura Linney's accent, it's pretty ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Ben Behind the Wheel
Driving Lessons There are a whole bunch of Reviews here; not much else to write, except that the movie is marvelous and that Ben finally learns how to . . .

Buy the DVD!

K. Distler 5-16-o8





Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - A subtle, engaging film for rainy afternoons.
"Driving Lessons", Rupert Grint's first important movie since "Harry Potter" is a throughly enjoyable effort. It tells a story of Ben, a 17-year old Jesus-obsessed high schooler, hired to take care of a second-rate ex-actress Evie (Julie Walters). Evie is very free-spirited, and after the initial shock (and a life-altering road trip), Ben starts questioning his values, upbringing and desires, much to the dislike of his controlling mother (Laura Liney).
The themes and the plot are masterfully thought-out, and although this movie could easily be tagged as "coming-of-age" or "disrespectful-of-Christianity", it never really falls into cliches of these categories. The very subtle execution and fantastic performances promise to make it watchable and easy to relate to. Grint is amazing as Ben, boldly venturing into much more mature material than his previous efforts, and Julie Walters is hilarious as Ben's confidante and roll model. Although there are plenty of laughs, the movie is essentially a drama, handling the conflicts these characters deal with in a very serious manner. A highly entertaining and engaging film about seizing the day and making your own choices.



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