Review: Maggie Smith Shines As 'The Lady In The Van'
Scott Carney ‘18 / Emertainment Monthly Staff Writer
One of the most standout aspects of The Lady in the Van, as well as its most surprising, is how strangely meta it is. The main plot of the film is not so much from Shepherd’s perspective as it is from Bennett’s, as the writer slowly pieces together the work that the audience is already watching. This type of storytelling has been done in other films before, but The Lady in the Van takes it a step forward in an interesting way. The primary conflict that Bennett has in the film is his struggle between his duty as a writer and his desire to live a valuable life and be a decent human being. As his writing side begins to win out in the middle of the film, events begin to occur that Bennett acknowledges to the audience did not really occur. Thus, the film takes dramatic liberties from its truth (not atypical in a film) but draws attention to them, leaving the audience to question whether any film should relay the entire truth, even if it is more boring than imagination.
Overall, the film’s run time is longer then it needs to be and even with its acknowledgment of dramatic liberties, some of the plot points are tied up a little too neatly. Still, is a both sad and funny story that you won’t believe is true (because not all of it is).
Overall Grade: B
Watch The Trailer:
[embedyt] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47T0HORY9gs[/embedyt]