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List Price: $14.98 | | Label: KOCH LORBER FILMS
Salesrank: 63292
Released: November 11, 2003 |
| Our Price: $5.87 |
| Used Price: $5.00 |
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MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: DVD |
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Editorial Review:
We are introduced to Janice Beard at her ill-starred beginnings. Her father dies of a heart attack during her birth which plunges her mother into a post-natal, post-mortem agoraphobic depression that lasts 23 years. Determined to earn the money for her mother’s treatment, Janice sets off into the work force with no skills or experience with disastrous results. Struggling to win everyone over, she thinks she has found love with the mail room boy but has actually become a pawn in an industrial espionage scheme that could ruin the company. Can little Janice find a cure for her mother, save the company and find true love in the bargain? Anything is possible!
Description of Janice Beard:
Janice Beard 45 WPM is a film for anyone who ever swam in the typing pool. It also provides reassurance that anyone who works in an office isn't alone in feeling alone. Scottish Janice (newcomer Eileen Walsh) suffers a never-ending bad hair day while temping at Kendon Motors during a car launch. She's earning pennies for her agoraphobic mother, to whom she sends elaborately staged videos fibbing about her successes in the big world. So simple a life gets complicated by the evil machinations of typing-pool shark Julia (a fantastic Patsy Kensit), and the dangerous allure of office boy Sean (Rhys Ifans sporting the same haircut from Notting Hill). An industrial espionage subplot tugs the light-hearted tone downward only very occasionally. Co-written and directed by first-timer Clare Kilner, on its original release this became a film festival favorite thanks to its dizzy charm (especially Walsh), for seeing the Kensit of Absolute Beginners struggle at a salsa class, and for opening with the line: "My father died in childbirth." --Paul Tonks
Janice Beard Reviews:
Eileen Walsh makes her debut as the winsome wallflower Janice Beard 
2005-09-18 - The life of Janice Beard (Eileen Walsh) was marked from the start when her father died in childbirth and her mother fell into a "post partum/post mordum depression" from which she has yet to recover. To help her mum, Janice comes up with a rich fantasy life to try and lift her up from the pits of despair, but now Janice has graduated from school and the time has come for her to join the workforce so that she can earn enough money for her mother's treatment back home in Edinburgh. So our heroine goes off into the world as a temp, which has its own peculiar pitfalls. Real secretaries get to have lunch; Janice the temp gets to learn Spanish instead, which is not what she was (temporarily) hired to do.
Then Janice gets a temp job in the secretarial pool at a London automobile company that is gearing up for the big launch (pronouncing "lunch") of its new car. As a temp Janice is low girl on the totem pole, and given her tendency to say what she thinks when somebody actually bothers to ask her opinion, she is not fitting in well with the other girls and she is certainly rubbing Julia (Patsy Kensit), the head of the secretarial pool the wrong way. The only bright spot is Sean (Rhys Ifans), the office boy who is the low man on the male totem pole at the company, so he and Janice are an obvious match. The only problem is that Sean is really an industrial spy for a rival car manufacturer, who has been sent to sabotage the lunch (a.k.a. the "launch"). He needs a patsy, and that gets to be Janice so it is really too bad that he likes her. So just when Janice has been accepted by her peers and is seen as being a valuable member of the group, the rug gets pulled out from underneath here. Then the real fun begins because Janice has to save the day (nobody else is going to do it).
I did not think of "Janice Beard 45 W.P.M." as the British version of the "Amelie," because the French film was filmed with Gallic whimsy while this 2003 effort embraces English quirkiness. By the time we get to such comparisons we might as well acknowledge the entire genre of eccentric wallflowers finding love and/or happiness, such as "Muriel's Wedding" from Australia, "Very Annie Marie" from Wales, and others from around the world. Director Clare Kilner ("Daphne & Apollo"), who wrote the script with Ben Hopkins, deserves credit for turning in a comedy with romantic overtones (as opposed to a romantic comedy) that comes in at 81 minutes without even any deleted scenes on the DVD. I ended up rounding up on this one because it is a solid little film with a winsome performance by Walsh in the title role. Usually I am left ticking off things on my finger that could have made the movie better, but with this one I just got hooked and went along for the ride. That is a rare treat these days.
Zen Innocence 
2005-07-06 - This film has been described as a British Amelie and that blurb is true in both respects: the main eponynomous Janice Beard captures the sensibilities of the British in the way Amelie captured the ethos of the French. The film is very well written, but it lives and dies on the performance of Eileen Walsh as Janice. And on that basis, it not only lives but it shines. These fairy tale movies can so easily devolve into a Hallmark card. This movie walks a tightrope over that danger. My only quibble is that the DVD does not include subtitles, and I know I missed a lot because I couldn't decipher much of the dialogue. Enjoy.
Traveler 
2004-05-15 - I first saw this movie on a British Airways flight and don't think it was ever released in the U.S. Rhys Ifans' comic genious is now well known to U.S. audiences and is matched by Eileen Walsh in this film. The film begins with the unique premise of Walsh's father (yes, father) dying in during childbirth, her mother who refuses thereafter to leave her house and the tales the daughter weaves to bring the world to her mother ... and then, the consequences of unleashing that imagination on the world when the daughter moves away to London to work. Really a very fine and entertaining film.