The Duke review – art thief takes one for the
common man
Roger Michell’s
warm take on the true story of how Kempton Bunton acquired the National
Gallery’s new Goya features a glorious performance by Jim Broadbent
Xan Brooks
Xan Brooks
@XanBrooks
Fri 4 Sep
2020 21.15 BST
All rise for The Duke, a scrappy underdog yarn
that makes a powerful case for the rackety English amateur, the common man who
survives by his wits with the odds stacked against him. Kempton Bunton of
Byker, for instance, is about as far removed from the Duke of Wellington as a
frog is from a prince. But now the Duke is trapped behind the wardrobe in
Kempton’s tatty back bedroom, which is one in the eye for the British class system
and means that Kempton is sitting pretty, at least for a while.
Roger Michell’s delightful true-crime caper
comes bolstered by a terrific lead performance from Jim Broadbent, rattling
about the red-brick terraces of early 1960s Newcastle. His Kempton Bunton is a
wannabe playwright and soapbox revolutionary, a man who prefers Chekhov to
Shakespeare because he feels that the Bard wrote too many plays about kings. By
night he’s sitting up in bed reading books by George Orwell. By day he’s
tilting at windmills, squabbling with shop-floor managers and getting under the
feet of his pinched, knackered wife. As played by Helen Mirren, Dorothy Bunton
is constantly cleaning up the mess left by her husband and her two adult sons.
She says: “Be sure to use the coasters. You’re not in Leeds now.”
The city of Leeds may be bad in its way, but
the real problem is London; it’s taken leave of its senses. Down at the
National Gallery, they’ve just spent £140,000 of public money to secure
Francisco Goya’s portrait of Arthur Wellesley, the Duke of Wellington. “An
outstanding example of late-period Goya,” sighs the curator. “Some half-baked
portrait by a Spanish drunk,” says Kempton. He argues that the cash would have
been better spent providing free TV licences for all the UK’s old age
pensioners. Kempton, perhaps relatedly, has recently served a brief prison term
for not paying his own TV licence.
Michell and Broadbent previously worked
together on 2013’s excellent Le Week-End, in which the actor played a
middle-aged professor in meltdown, drunkenly singing along to Bob Dylan inside
a poky Paris hotel. The Duke (scripted by Richard Bean and the BBC’s Clive
Coleman) is a more obviously crowd-pleasing affair, precision-tooled but
big-hearted. Michell does well in capturing a 60s north-east of belching
chimney-stacks and rag-and-bone men; a limbo-land Britain, caught between the
end of rationing and the birth of the Beatles. Kempton, one suspects, has both
boots in the old world - but he can still dream of tomorrow.
What a lovely, rousing, finally moving film
this is. The Duke is unashamedly sentimental and resolutely old-fashioned in
the best sense of the term: a design classic built along the same lines as That
Sinking Feeling, A Private Function or 50s Ealing comedies. In an earlier era,
the role of Kempton would have been played by Denholm Elliott or Alastair Sim.
Hauled into court to account for the theft,
Kempton is finally given the stage he’s been craving all his life. The man is
an upstart, a liar, undeniably a crook. But he’s also an idealist, a committed
socialist, and it is this side of Kempton that now comes to the fore. He teases
the judge, jokes with the jury and explains that he puts his faith “not in God,
but in people”. Meanwhile, up in the public gallery, sit his own band of
people. The posh young woman who employs his wife as a cleaner. The exploited
co-worker whom he once tried to defend. Individually, in Kempton’s view, these
people are all just single bricks. But put them together and you make a house.
Put them together and you build Jerusalem.
No comments:
Post a Comment