Dreams of a Life

Dreams of a Life

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Carol Morley
Produced by Cairo Cannon
Written by Carol Morley
Starring Zawe Ashton
Distributed by Dogwoof Pictures
Release dates
  • 16 December 2011 (2011-12-16) (UK)
Running time
95 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Ireland
Language English
Box office £187,513[1]

Dreams of a Life is a 2011 drama-documentary film, released by Dogwoof Pictures, directed by Carol Morley and starring Zawe Ashton.

Plot

It tells the story of Joyce Carol Vincent, whose body was found in January 2006 decomposing in her bedsit in Wood Green, North London, after she apparently died unnoticed in December 2003, surrounded by unopened Christmas presents with her TV still switched on.[2]

The film interviews various friends, acquaintances and former partners to try to tell the story of Joyce, who is played in reconstructions by Ashton.

Production

Director Carol Morley was inspired to make the documentary on Joyce's life after reading a bare-bones article on her that failed to mention her age, race or any detailed information. She tracked down interviewees by taking out ads in newspapers and hiring a cab to drive around London asking people to contact her if they knew Joyce.[3] She was surprised to learn that many of the respondents did not know Joyce was dead until she spoke to them even though some of them remembered hearing of her death when it made newspapers.

Morley was criticized for an extended fictionalized sequence that featured Zawe Ashton as Joyce performing "A Smile is Just a Frown". She stated that she was inspired to keep the sequence in the film by a similar sequence in Agnès Varda's Cléo from 5 to 7 and also credited Varda's documentary work with inspiring much of her movie.

Morley was also in contact with Joyce's four sisters, all of whom refused to be in the film.[4] Though they asked Morley not to make the film, she went ahead with production anyway, but gave them an advance screening in order to show that she had been respectful in remembering their sister.

Reception

The film received a rating of 62 on aggregate movie review website Metacritic and 70% on Rotten Tomatoes indication overall positive reception.[5][6]

Steven Wilson's album Hand. Cannot. Erase. was inspired by his viewing the movie.[7]

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.