"Get up off your knees," barks Henry Fool (Ryan) to Simon Grim (Urbaniak) as he swaggers
into Simon's basement at the beginning of the film and takes up residence. It is
a directive that comes to characterize their relationship. Henry plays the mysterious,
commanding, bombastic life teacher to Simon's reticent, bullied, and unassuming garbage
man. The film is about the ironic influence the two men have on each other. It is
a tale composed on an epic canvas, which is quite a departure for filmmaker Hal Hartley,
whose distinctive vision has practically made all his films (The Unbelievable Truth,
Trust, Simple Men, Amateur, Flirt) into their own unique genre. Until now, he has
been a master of the hyper-real, depicting characters whose sense of isolation is
profound and fairly impenetrable. With Henry Fool, however, Hartley has made his
most dynamic and accomplished film to date. In no small measure this is because his
new film is about the relationships between people, rather than the gulfs that surround
them. Henry is a pontificating intellectual who believes that his notebooks containing
his Confessions will revolutionize the writing establishment upon publication. Only
thing is, they're never finished and he won't let anyone read them -- and there's
also the ugly matter of some vile deeds in his past. But he generously gives the
taciturn Simon a blank notebook to record his unspoken thoughts and what comes out
is a cramped, scribbled stream of iambic pentameter. The words are so beautiful that
they stimulate the mute cashier at the corner store to suddenly sing, turn his once-tormentors
into his new acolytes, and causes his sister's period to begin a week and a half
early as she types his long poem into the Internet. From there, it's instant fame
for Simon as the student surpasses his questionable teacher, although their relationship
continues through several more unexpected bends in the moral river. Though Hartley's
ironic stance toward the world is still firmly in place, Henry Fool has a more darkly
comic tone as questions of art, commerce, and talent are deftly explored. Parker
Posey has one of her choicest roles as Simon's loud, promiscuous sister, and Camille
Paglia even pops up at one point to provide commentary. Hartley's wry distance makes
it hard to say for certain what it ultimately all adds up to, but links together
smoothly enough as it unfolds. It's perhaps a little overlong with too much effort
devoted at times to secondary characters and subplots. And be prepared for a couple
of scenes of a grossly scatological nature that surpass anything found in the current
spate of bathroom-humor comedies. Henry Fool is likely to make true believers out
of Hartley's existent fans; to the newcomers there may be no better portal of entry.
--Marjorie Baumgarten
Interviews
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Full Length Reviews
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Other Films by Hal Hartley
Amateur 
Book of Life 
Flirt 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Little Voice 
The Last Big Thing 
Star Maps 
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