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Stranger Than Fiction

Stranger Than Fiction (2006)

November. 10,2006
|
7.5
|
PG-13
| Fantasy Drama Comedy Romance

Harold Crick is a lonely IRS agent whose mundane existence is transformed when he hears a mysterious voice narrating his life.

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Reviews

sarakurtis
2006/11/10

Stranger than Fiction is a good film with a quirky synopsis. An auditor suddenly finds a female narrating his every move. After getting accustomed to it he is given a jolting prediction- that he is soon to die, which understandably freaks him out. Trying to make sense he goes around to people which form the body of the film. This is a thought provoking movie with a fine turn by Will Ferrell as the lead who hears his life narration- an uncharacteristic foray into serious acting by the comedian. Emma Thomson lends her lush voice as the narrator. For an offbeat film with a soul you cannot go wrong with Stranger than Fiction.

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gordonroad-62850
2006/11/11

Overall, this was a fairly enjoyable effort from director Marc Forster and screenwriter Zach Helm. The most satisfying aspect of it was Will Ferrell's grounded and restrained performance as Harold Crick which seems like a breath of fresh air compared to his usual over-the-top antics in certain comedies. The acting across the board was pretty strong with Emma Thompson, Dustin Hoffman and Maggie Gyllenhaal as the supporting cast.The theme of appreciating life and living it to the fullest is one I felt was explored with the correct amount of nuance, whilst seeing Crick descend into a nervous breakdown due to his life being narrated as part of author Karen Eiffel's story is quite interesting. However, I do have some problems with the film, mainly due to how the moral implications of Eiffel potentially having killed real people with her writing are not really explored, and the philosophical side of the narrative that could have emerged is not brought up really. Also the romance that builds between Crick and Ana Pascal doesn't grow organically for me.In the end this was a fairly enjoyable comedy-drama that I would recommend.

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Harry Wren
2006/11/12

On the surface it's another film with a good concept, horribly executed, but not the worst film of all time - not even close. However, just the ending alone pisses me off so badly it makes this film a limp, useless waste of time.

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CinePendejo
2006/11/13

If you know my style, ambiguous movies are always a scream for me. A film with so much subtext and inner symbolism gives me a lot to enjoy while dissecting and interpreting at different angles. The oeuvre of David Lynch, Alejandro Jodorowski, Stanley Kubrick, and even Charlie Kaufman all live up to this notion, offering masterpiece after masterpiece.However, there are some hackneyed films and filmmakers that shamelessly try to replicate that sort of style. Where they make a story buried in subtext and "mind-twisties" without any grace or intelligence to make it all work. A movie that thinks its soooooo smart with the subtext but winds up obvious and pretentious, and offers a unique universe that is barely explored beyond plot mechanics that make no f-ing sense. And said hackneyed filmmakers is Marc Forster and screenwriter Zach Helm, and said film is STRANGER THAN FICTION, a stupid, bland, pretentious mockery of a Charlie Kaufman film without any understanding of what makes them great in the first place. It's literally ADAPTATION for morons.Will Ferrel stars as a mediocre IRS agent living a normal life until a narration explains his everyday life like he lives in a novel. See, his whole life is orchestrated by this narrator, a real life author who makes great stories about troubled people. He suddenly hears her, and needs to find the narrator in person in order to understand his true fate.Sounds interesting, but that's about it. There's literally nothing else underneath that beyond "boy this sounds trippy, yo!" There's no underlying subtext about the nature of authorship, no impressive visuals or symbolism, or any depth of this world beyond the surface level. All it does is illustrate how everyone's lives are like stories right down to the minute plot progression and arcs as if we never took 9th Grade English class! Even then, it's used no more than a guy loosening up, finding his fun inner self, and get laid to a spunky and rebellious girl in the end. Because WE HAVEN'T SEEN THAT ENOUGH ALREADY! This is another problem: the film tells waaaay too much of what should be shown. Subtext is way too much the text in this movie, in which characters blurt out what we should interpret on our own. Here's an example: one of the psychiatrists (played by a bored Dustin Hoffman, no doubt) suggest that this "real story" could either be a tragedy or a comedy. So Ferrell experiments this to aforementioned spunky rebellious girl in a bakery. She tries acting nice to him, but because he's a stereotypical stick in the mud, he rejects unintentionally. She reacted slightly unkindly, to which Ferrell notices. Had the scene end right there, we would've got enough information about whether or not it's tragic or comedic all on our own. But then it keeps going, with Ferrell comically saying "You were being nice and I rejected it. I guess this ends in tragedy." SERIOUSLY?! WHO WROTE THIS? Oh and it doesn't matter since they pork 20 minutes later anyway. Oh well. The whole film is like that, where it constantly holds your hand and expects you to be impressed by its genius. All I'm thinking about is "JUST GET TO THE POINT!" But here is what really blows my horn. The narrator is supposed to be this high-class author who makes poetic movies about lonely man, and there is a certain recurring sequence of event of which they endure that truly makes it "masterful pieces of work" But as I sit there, I realize, "well why does it matter if that event needed to happen to Ferrell and what kind of poetry to his life should be 'profound'?" It's literally a boring life Ferrell's character is living in, and said event wouldn't make a damn difference at all. Its heavily emphasized in great importance that the inevitable event in his life that the narrator is constructing is what makes this "story" work, but I don't see a damn bit of difference at all! Not to spoil, but it makes no sense.Even among the frustrating screenplay, everything else is all smack dab right in the middle of "Not bad but not good" section. The cinematography is uninspired, the actors merely act instead of conveying earned and true emotions, the color palette is drab, and the movie is overall a slapdash of clichés and fake emotional moments. I'm more than certain it has its fans, but I'm still hard-pressed to realize how anyone, who has seen at least ONE drama or ONE mind-bender" in their lives, should like this.

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