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Stranger Than Fiction

Rated - 3 stars

Stranger than Fiction

Harold Crick (Will Ferrell) is a numbers guy. He's obsessive about counting: the number of brush strokes he applies to cleaning his teeth; the number of steps it takes from his front door to the bus-stop; the time it takes to get to work. Everything adds up.

Harold works for - who else? - The Internal Revenue Service. But that nagging voice he hears in the back of his head, that isn't his conscience speaking. The voice is female. And English. And more articulate than Harold can easily explain. Disturbingly, it seems to know everything about him and more - almost as if it was his own personal narrator. At first it's an irritation. Then the voice announces his imminent demise and Harold is left to figure out if a rewrite is on the cards.

On the surface, Stranger Than Fiction is a smart post-modern comedy in the vein of Groundhog Day, The Truman Show or Adaptation. Underneath the slick, it's a sentimental midlife crisis movie arguing that playing the guitar, eating milk and cookies and making love to Maggie Gyllenhaal is more life-affirming than auditing tax returns. (No arguments there.)

Stranger than Fiction

A performer better known for tearing his clothes off at the drop of a hat, Ferrell earns his dramatic stripes by underplaying nicely. It's a subdued, modulated performance that draws out another delightfully wiggy performance from Dustin Hoffman as the literary professor who takes a sympathetic interest in his predicament, advising Harold to romance his latest audit (bohemian baker Maggie) in the hope that his story might turn out to be a comedy. Unfortunately the narrator - aka blocked novelist Emma Thompson - is intent on tragedy, if only she can figure out just how to bump off her main character.

This is a likeable, quirky movie, but it's altogether too cute to be the modern classic everyone would dearly like it to be. Zach Helm's screenplay never bothers to work through its own premise. Harold can hear his apparently omniscient narrator, but, inexplicably, she remains oblivious to his protestations - at least until he finally shows up at the reclusive author's penthouse apartment. So is his fate written in stone or not? What about the supporting characters? And what is this book actually about anyway? From what he hear of it, the 'literary masterpiece' Thompson is supposed to be writing is purest American treacle.

Stranger than Fiction

Director Marc Forster is a versatile talent (Monster's Ball; Finding Neverland) but he has a habit of trying to camouflage weaker material with visual flourishes (Stay). You can see it plainly here: while the stronger scenes between Ferrell and Hoffman and Ferrell and Gyllenhaal are shot in a straightforward manner, the stuff with Emma Thompson, her typewriter and her literary minder (a redundant Queen Latifah) are dressed up in obtuse camera angles, fancy cutting and CGI.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 5 starsMasterpiece of its type

BH101 from Cambridge , 11/12/2006

This is, for me, the Groundhog Day of the 00s. It's a hugely engaging, quirky high-concept film which could have gone so horribly wrong in dozens of ways, and yet - it steers a path through all the potential traps to deliver something that is very funny, very moving and very memorable. Will Ferrell is perfectly cast as Harold Crick and rarely will you feel such empathy with a character in a film as he struggles to come to terms with the strange way in which his life is unfolding. Dustin Hoffman and Emma Thompson bring a richness to their respective supporting roles, and Maggie Gyllenhaal is as winning as usual as the love interest.

The script contains just the right balance of humour, pathos and drama. The opening few minutes may irritate you, as you adjust to the eccentric style and tone of this film, but once it hits its stride, it's truly captivating. There's not quite enough for Queen Latifah to do, and there are a few sections which drag a tiny bit around the middle, but these are small criticisms of a masterly piece of work, which offers something genuinely different and refreshing. The scene in which Hoffman attempts to discern by interrogating Harold what the nature of the narrative is in which he is the hero - a comedy or a tragedy - is a standout moment at the heart of this clever and superb film. I think people will be talking about this film in years to come in the same affectionate manner as they do Groundhog Day. But history may prove me wrong on that. It's just a great example of a film which gets pretty much everything right, and the result is sheer entertainment.

  109 out of 117 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsA little Gem

KH08 from Bristol , 11/04/2007

Whoah where did this come from? I added this film to my rental queue in the expectation that it would fill a slot. when it arrvied I'll be honest I thought do I really fancy this?

I wasn't a huge fan of being John Malchovich and felt that this film would be the same however I was very very wrong.

Ferrell provides I think delivers his best role to date, real character with jsut a touch of madness. he is also very supported by chain smoking thompson, very mellow hoffman and as ever a very sexy Maggie.

I don;t get where the reveiws that this has no story line or is over arty, I think this film is accessible to all. admittedly it is not laugh a minute nor as dramatic however it does have a place in your rental queue.

give it a go!!!

  47 out of 52 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsBrilliant

A customer from Huddersfield , 30/11/2006

This film was a fantastically writen piece of cinema. To try and explain the story line makes you sound totally insane.

The film has a very clever way of making the strangness of the premise seem almost normal, to such an extent that its almost believable.

There are fantasic performances from all the cast and the film is beautifully directed in both pace and style.

Clever humour and a wonderful story make this film a must see.

  31 out of 33 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsAbsolutely Brilliant

Chandni Rosser from London, England , 14/01/2007

This has to be, hands down, one of the most engaging and wonderful movies I have seen in a long time. I admit to having reservations when I went to see it due to Will Ferrell's overacting but in retrospect, it was an inspiration to cast him in the role of Harold. The plot is convoluted, it Will keep you engaged and absolutely impossible to explain without sounding demented. My suggestion.. watch it..its a treat!

  27 out of 33 people found this review helpful

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 4 starsExcellent

A customer from Basingstoke , 30/04/2008

I wasn't sure about this at first and the pace was very slow. But that was just because I've surfeited on action movies and hadn't used my brain in ages. Once I hooked into this I found it fascinating and compelling. The build-up was a great study in human nature with some real insights - for me anyway. The only let down was a weak plot finish but it didn't overly mar an otherwise excellent film.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 starsGood Little Film

henrysugar henrysugar from Leamington Spa [Highly rated reviewer] , 29/03/2008

This id the kind of film I love discovering. I don't remember much of a hoohaar when it was released. This is probably because it may not appeal to everyone as it falls into the bracket of curio/cult/ or 'little film'.

There are some excellent understated performances from Farrell and Hoffman as well as a solid 'english' effort from Emma Thompson.

The film examines life and how we live it through the life and minds of a IRS employee, a baker and a best selling author. Its better than it sounds!

Don't be put off by the quirkiness of the first 20 mins.

I can see why this kind of film would never be a blockbuster but that is why more films like this should be made.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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