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Closed Caption; Original theatrical trailer; Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround English sountrack; English, French, Spanish and Portuguese subtitles
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Main Title/Working [7:17]
2. Home, Drab Home [9:37]
3. Food Fights [5:09]
4. Scrounging for Change [10:23]
5. Job Comparison [3:48]
6. Mad, Sad and Pervert [5:56]
7. Drunken Karaoke [7:59]
8. Making Out With a Pervert [4:36]
9. Two Months or Five Minutes [1:04]
10. "I Was Married Once" [7:19]
11. French Tunnel-Hater [3:22]
12. The Accident [2:38]
13. Penny's Hospital Run [8:06]
14. A Chat With the Doctor [10:06]
15. Samantha on His Heart [5:17]
16. The Fait Accompli’s Kismet? [2:29]
17. “It’s About Getting’ By!” [6:23]
18. A Show of Love [11:29]
19. Getting Better [7:12]
20. End Credits [4:45]
The carefully observed sufferings of a working-class London family are brilliantly portrayed in All or Nothing, another bleakly powerful drama from writer-director Mike Leigh. With a typical bare-bones plot, the story follows an ensemble of quietly desperate working-class Brits: a mild-mannered taxi driver (Timothy Spall); his unhappy wife (Lesley Manville); and their overweight children (James Corden and Alison Garland). Returning to form after the departure of Topsy Turvy, Leigh here exhibits his genius for finding dignity and importance in a miserable day-to-day existence. The director's technique of improvising with actors during the scripting process unlocks subtleties of characterization rarely seen on screen and, as a result, these characters live and breathe. At the center is regular Leigh collaborator Spall, whose portrayal of a long-suffering and decent man is riveting. It's comparable to his performance in Leigh's widely acclaimed Secrets and Lies, and All or Nothing has much in common with that masterpiece, moving similarly toward a powerful catharsis at the end. Ultimately, the film finds Leigh at the height of his powers, looking through the pain and indignity of the human condition to find the treads of decency and love within us all. Gregory Baird, Barnes & Noble
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