Review: 'The Duke' is a heist story loaded with whimsy, but it's Jim Broadbent and Helen Mirren who steal the show.
There are strains of the old Ealing Studios comedies — whimsical tales of plucky Brits taking on the system with guile and eccentricity — running through “The Duke,” a based-on-a-true-story tale that’s enlivened by the pairing of Jim Broadbent and Helen Mirren.
Broadbent plays Kempton Bunton, who we meet in 1961, in the dock at the Old Bailey. He’s accused of pulling off the heist of the century — the theft from the National Gallery of a Goya portrait of the Duke of Wellington, priced at 140,000 pounds. (In the UK, the disappearance of the Goya was so noteworthy that it was used as a gag in the first James Bond movie, “Dr. No.”)
Director Roger Michell (who died in September) and screenwriters Richard Bean and Clive Coleman then rewind to six months earlier. Kempton is a cabbie whose big mouth and big ideas keep getting him into trouble. He runs afoul of the law for not keeping a television license, under the quaint UK law that one must pay a regular fee for owning a TV set. He petitions the government, without success, to eliminate the TV license fee for pensioners (something Parliament finally did 40 years later).
Kempton doesn’t object to the BBC; in fact, he regularly sends them scripts he’s written for TV dramas. The only one his infinitely patient wife, Dorothy (Mirren), objects to is one that references the death of their daughter — a loss neither parent has allowed themselves to grieve sufficiently.
When news breaks that the UK government has bought the Goya, Kempton rails to Dorothy and their younger son, Jackie (Fionn Whitehead, from “Dunkirk”), about the unfairness of the government spending money on a painting rather than on helping the people. Then, suddenly, the Goya is stolen — and Kempton and Jackie are busy hiding it in the wardrobe in the spare bedroom, where Jackie’s wayward older brother, Kenny (Jack Bandera), sometimes sleeps.
Michell (“Notting Hill,” “Persuasion”) gets a fair amount of humor out of Kempton’s irascible activism and Dorothy’s exasperation when his do-gooder streak costs him another job. But there’s a serious undertone, as well, and Broadbent and Mirren are just the wise theatrical hands who can navigate both the comical and tragic elements of the story.
The capper is, of course, the trial — with Matthew Goode (now appearing as studio boss Robert Evans in “The Offer”) adding some late-innings spice as Kempton’s highly amused barrister. The result may feel a bit inevitable, but the road Michell takes getting there makes “The Duke” a noble effort.
——
‘The Duke’
★★★
Opens Friday, May 6, at select theaters. Rated R for language and brief sexuality. Running time: 96 minutes.