1h 44m available with multiple audio tracks and subtitles.

Nicholas Hytner
Director

Maggie Smith
Miss Shepherd

Alex Jennings
Alan Bennett

Jim Broadbent
Underwood

Clare Hammond
Young Margaret Fairchild

George Fenton
Conductor

BBC Concert Orchestra
The British Symphony Orchestra

Jamie Parker
Estate Agent

بسام الراوي
Mar 19, 2026No review content available.

MarieNo Ess
May 29, 2023source: The Lady in the Van

Kouki✨🌚
Nov 22, 2022"The Lady in the Van" is one comedy drama that's fun and it entertains in a touching emotional way for the fact that it develops friendship and love in a strange and unexpected way it's really thru difference! Actually this is based on a true story set in England, near London. It involves Miss Shepherd(the top notch and in form Maggie Smith)who's a woman that's past her prime she's now of unknown origin who now and later for an extended stay parks her van in Alan Bennett's(Alex Jennings)driveway and as mentioned lives in that spot a long time in fact up to 15 years! The friendship and meeting has it's growing pains that slowly but surely changes the lives of both forever. The past of both central characters are revealed and the movie takes a path of a rare and touching picture of happiness at being at peace with fate and life before the end. Overall "The Lady in the Van" is one film to enjoy as it makes you want to care about life and people even though if they or the situation seem uncertain and different.

Nuha’s Design
Nov 22, 2022Somewhat of an acquired taste this film, because it is not without its many weaknesses. The film focuses on Alan Bennett (here played as two characters – himself, and himself the writer) and his interactions with an elderly woman he allowed to live out of a van she parked on his driveway. The nature of the film means it is very Bennett in its tone, and it has an enjoyable buttoned-up feeling to it in the most part. That said it isn't quite as engaging as it really should be. The story doesn't connect up as well as the narration suggests, and it does frequently feel like it is being drawn out more than it can bare – in particular the resolutions, which go on much too long and lose the charm they needed. The performances more or less carry the film though. Jennings does a great impression of Bennett, but more than that he does give strong performances in both positions. He was the better character, but Smith is great as the lady of the title. She has a lot of energy and well observed presence and humor throughout. I think the thing that shows how good the two leads are, is that we can believe why the other allows the other to be in their lives and be that way. The downside of this is that the two performances are better than the film itself is; so at times they do drive it forward by force of presence, but they cannot do it all – and when performances takes a step back, the film suffers.