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IMDbPro

Happy-Go-Lucky

  • 2008
  • R
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
42K
YOUR RATING
Sally Hawkins in Happy-Go-Lucky (2008)
This is the theatrical trailer for Happy-Go-Lucky, directed by Mike Leigh.
Play trailer2:06
11 Videos
99+ Photos
Coming-of-AgeQuirky ComedyComedyDramaRomance

A look at a few chapters in the life of Poppy, a cheery, colorful, North London schoolteacher whose optimism tends to exasperate those around her.A look at a few chapters in the life of Poppy, a cheery, colorful, North London schoolteacher whose optimism tends to exasperate those around her.A look at a few chapters in the life of Poppy, a cheery, colorful, North London schoolteacher whose optimism tends to exasperate those around her.

  • Director
    • Mike Leigh
  • Writer
    • Mike Leigh
  • Stars
    • Sally Hawkins
    • Alexis Zegerman
    • Samuel Roukin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    42K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mike Leigh
    • Writer
      • Mike Leigh
    • Stars
      • Sally Hawkins
      • Alexis Zegerman
      • Samuel Roukin
    • 230User reviews
    • 174Critic reviews
    • 84Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 39 wins & 63 nominations total

    Videos11

    Happy-Go-Lucky: Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    Happy-Go-Lucky: Trailer
    What Brings You Here
    Clip 1:01
    What Brings You Here
    What Brings You Here
    Clip 1:01
    What Brings You Here
    My Space
    Clip 0:59
    My Space
    High Heels
    Clip 0:54
    High Heels
    Celebrate Chaos
    Clip 0:58
    Celebrate Chaos
    Happy-Go-Lucky: My Space
    Clip 0:59
    Happy-Go-Lucky: My Space

    Photos109

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    + 103
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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Sally Hawkins
    Sally Hawkins
    • Poppy
    Alexis Zegerman
    Alexis Zegerman
    • Zoe
    Samuel Roukin
    Samuel Roukin
    • Tim
    Elliot Cowan
    Elliot Cowan
    • Bookshop Assistant
    Andrea Riseborough
    Andrea Riseborough
    • Dawn
    Sinead Matthews
    Sinead Matthews
    • Alice
    • (as Sinéad Matthews)
    Kate O'Flynn
    Kate O'Flynn
    • Suzy
    Sarah Niles
    Sarah Niles
    • Tash
    Eddie Marsan
    Eddie Marsan
    • Scott
    Joseph Kloska
    Joseph Kloska
    • Suzy's Boyfriend
    Sylvestra Le Touzel
    Sylvestra Le Touzel
    • Heather
    Anna Reynolds
    • Receptionist
    Nonso Anozie
    Nonso Anozie
    • Ezra
    Trevor Cooper
    Trevor Cooper
    • Patient
    Karina Fernandez
    Karina Fernandez
    • Rosita Santos
    Philip Arditti
    Philip Arditti
    • Flamenco Student
    Viss Elliot Safavi
    Viss Elliot Safavi
    • Flamenco Student
    • (as Viss Elliot)
    Rebekah Staton
    Rebekah Staton
    • Flamenco Student
    • Director
      • Mike Leigh
    • Writer
      • Mike Leigh
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews230

    7.042.1K
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    Featured reviews

    9lexo1770

    A cheerful film with an underlying vein of tragedy

    Happy-Go-Lucky has been reviewed in the British press as a relatively lightweight Mike Leigh movie, but I'm not so sure. The story revolves around Sally Hawkins' remarkable performance as primary school teacher Poppy Cross, a highly unusual character in that Hawkins and Leigh between them manage to make her consistently cheerful and optimistic without being either naive or irritating. Poppy is presented as both relentlessly cheery and, on another level, remarkably intuitive; throughout the film, she has a series of encounters with troubled male figures (a boy in her class who has started bullying, a very strange homeless Irishman and, above all, her phenomenally uptight driving instructor Scott) and in all of them, Poppy's liveliness and friendly curiosity about other people is seen to be a powerful counter to male self-pity, anger and despair.

    Hawkins' character is not someone who is inclined to let life get her down, so it's just as well that she is surrounded by people with a somewhat more sardonic or downbeat take on reality. Her flatmate Zoe (Alexis Zegerman, very good) is a wonderfully dry and sarky counter to Poppy's enthusiasm, although the affection between them is palpable. Poppy's younger sisters Suzy and Helen are also quite different; Suzy is a law student who is more interested in clubbing, drinking and playing with her brother-in-law's Playstation than in criminal justice, while Helen is heavily pregnant, obsessed with acquiring the trappings of a respectable suburban life and unable to understand how her older sister can be so happy living in a rented flat and not stepping onto the property ladder.

    The big surprise for me is that I had been led to believe that this is a more or less straightforward feelgood film. It isn't. Scott, Poppy's driving teacher (Eddie Marsan), is the most affecting character in it, and one of the greatest and most unforgettable characters in Leigh's oeuvre. Most of the reviews I've read of the film depict Scott as a hateful, sinister or otherwise despicable character, but although it's true that he is an uptight, judgmental, angry bigot, it is also perfectly clear from his first appearance that he doesn't know what he's talking about and that he is driven by emotional problems that he hasn't even begun to get a handle on. Marsan's extraordinary performance is one of the best things I've seen on film for a long time. Scott has been afflicted with very bad teeth and a mild speech defect (he can't really say the letter 'r') and although his inner anger and bigotry is played for laughs for a lot of the film, in the end it is allowed to blossom forth in a riveting scene where his fury, jealousy and terror of his own darkness spill forth in a heartbreaking and riveting torrent. If part of the point of art is to help us to understand people we would otherwise have little sympathy with, then this film is a work of art. I've never seen Marsan before but he deserves awards for this movie, no question.

    Happy-Go-Lucky is a highly enjoyable and often very funny film, but it also carries terrible sadness. I have never been a massive fan of Mike Leigh, but lately I have to admit that I was wrong. He just seems to get better and better.
    Gordon-11

    Annoying and irritating characters

    This film is about a London school teacher who is constantly happy, and even childish.

    I was hoping "Happy Go Lucky" would at least be a feel good happy movie. With this expectation, I was devastatingly disappointed by what I saw. Poppy is a person who does not take anything seriously. Instead of being cute and comical, she comes across as being very annoying and even offensively stupid at times. She and her friends engage in tireless and pointless conversations, making the whole film really boring. The driving instructor is unlikeable as he is uptight and rigid, but his scenes are the comparatively most captivating out of the whole film.

    I don't see the reason for the rave reviews for this film. It's ever so boring and irritating.
    7starvin4megravy

    Whatever she's on, I'll have a double, please

    Mike Leigh's done it again ... for fans and detractors alike! Poppy, his latest creation, sails through this slice of life with a smile on her face, fun on her mind and kindness in her heart.

    Irritating? I didn't think so. On my good days, I rather hope there's a little of her in me.

    For me, she was quite brilliantly brought to life by the excellent Sally Hawkins. Ironically, if she calls to mind any other inhabitant of Planet Leigh then it's probably Jane Horrocks's rather more sour Nic (or was it Nat?) in Life Is Sweet.

    And Poppy has much to be happy about. A true friend, with whom she shares a not-too-shabby flat in a Finsbury Park that I shall not stoop to comparing with the N4 district of my own experience. A job she was born to do, among supportive colleagues. An enjoyable social life, memories of travels past, a cool reetro bike (for a while, at least ... ) and a wardrobe straight out of (ahem!) an Australian's nightmare all go to emphasise the message given by the film's title.

    Into her life ambles driving instructor Scott, played by the ever-welcome Eddie Marsan, and the real fun begins. If Poppy can be said to stroll across the surface of life's duckpond without even getting the soles of her cowboy boots wet, then Scott is a man slowly drowning. The film's strongest plot line (this *is* Mike Leigh!) charts the evolving relationship between these apparent opposites,and the interplay really lights up the screen.

    To say more would dent your enjoyment should you decide to go and see for yourself! If you go by bike, remember to lock up securely or - better still - maybe your best friend will take you along in her "mad" yellow car.

    However you get there, why not let Poppy's attitude infect you for a few hours after you leave? It probably will anyway ...
    7seawalker

    Maybe the world is too much for even the most dedicated optimist?

    Some UK critics have been saying that "Happy-Go-Lucky" is the happiest and most cheerful movie that Mike Leigh has ever made. Well, I don't know if I would exactly agree with that. It is and it isn't.

    Sally Hawkins' primary school teacher Poppy is, indeed, a very happy individual. Annoyingly happy, insanely cheerful, depressingly optimistic and psychotically 'Up!', most of the time. It is a tribute to Sally Hawkins performance that, once you get past the initial irritation with her, you completely fall in love with Poppy, her goodness, her openness and, yes, her simple niceness.

    Then there is Eddie Marsan's driving instructor Scott. Scott is the very antithesis of happy. Scott is rigid, angry, frustrated, impatient, knotted up and racist. A borderline OCD sufferer, who is tortured by who-knows-what in his past. Scott is the most bitter and overwhelming character in a Mike Leigh film since David Thewlis' Johnny in "Naked". It is a towering performance by Eddie Marsan.

    If Poppy is the light, Scott is definitely the dark, but it seemed to me that dark shadows inhabit the whole of "Happy-Go-Lucky". The unhappy schoolboy, the glum Sister, the other sister - a social climber who dominates her husband. Little vignettes of irritation and annoyance. Typical Mike Leigh.

    "Happy-Go-Lucky" is a really good film, if you stick with it. I liked the way that Poppy does stop smiling towards the end. Maybe the world is too much for even the most dedicated optimist?
    bob the moo

    Poppy is the whole film and I found her disingenuous and irritating

    When this film came out my girlfriend said she wanted to see it because she'd heard good things. After much time waiting for her to be in the mood for it, I eventually queued it up when by myself and I am glad I did as she would have truly hated this film. The plot (as light as it is) is about a 30-year-old woman who is as cheerful and perky as the day is long. She hangs out with her friends, she meets a guy, she learns how to drive and in all these things we see her infectious sense of happiness. There isn't much more to this and I do not thing I have seen a film that depends so totally on whether or not you like the main character.

    I said she is infectious but then so are many diseases and to be honest I found Poppy to be as enjoyable. Her character is the type to speak to strangers, to constantly have a zany remark, to be the one making a spectacle of herself and so on. Of course her being the polar opposite of me didn't help, but I found nothing to make me question myself here and on the contrary I spent much of the film wondering if Polly isn't suffering from some sort of mental illness. The majority of the film sees Poppy in full-on zany mood, mostly in collaboration with others but occasionally contrasting her with a dull married couple and her driving instructor, who carries all of his anger with him all the time. When the film is letting Poppy just be herself I found it tiresome. As a character she says nothing real and everything is a little joke or witty episode. It is only the contrast where she comes out and I think there is really only one or two moments in the film where I felt a real person had come out of Poppy.

    The cast are mixed and not in a goo way. Hawkins got lots of praise of this performance but I thought it was terrible. In one or two scenes she lets the façade drop so we see her at her most real. I loved these moments but the downside of them was that we then know the rest is a façade and not her really. Her acting involves cheeky mockney dialogue and little else. Marsan is much better. His rage and anger is convincing and his performance works well next to the moments when Hawkins is not OTT cheerful. The supporting cast is OK but really it is Hawkins' film and this is something to keep in mind.

    Whether you like this film or not depends very much on liking Poppy. You may find her freewheeling color to be charmingly quirky but for me she used it as a barrier to any real discussion or humanity and she struck me as disingenuous throughout the film. The moments where she drops the wisecracks and zaniness and lets something like empathy or concern for others come through are great, but they are few and far between.

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    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The role of Poppy was written specifically for Sally Hawkins.
    • Goofs
      In the scene after Poppy has aborted her lessons for good with Scott, she walks past the same row of shops twice.
    • Quotes

      [repeated line]

      Scott: En-ra-ha!

    • Connections
      Featured in Happy-Go-Lucky: Mike Leigh's Characters (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Common People
      Performed by Pulp

      Written by Jarvis Cocker (as Cocker) / Nick Banks (as Banks) / Candida Doyle (as Doyle) / Steve Mackey (as Mackey) / Russell Senior (as Senior)

      Published by Universal/Island Music Ltd

      Courtesy of Universal-Island Records Ltd

      Under licence from Universal Music Operations

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 21, 2008 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Yêu Đời Lên Bạn Nhé
    • Filming locations
      • Tower Bridge School, Southwark, London, UK(school scenes)
    • Production companies
      • Film4
      • Ingenious Film Partners
      • Special Treats Production Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,512,016
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $73,867
      • Oct 12, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $18,696,602
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 58m(118 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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