Deconstructing Harry

1997 Comedy

Woody Allen wrote, directed, and stars in this very dark comedy about a novelist, Harry Block, who says with admirable honesty, "I'm a guy who can't function well in life, but I can in art." So far, Harry has made his way through six psychiatrists and three marriages (one, conveniently enough, with one of his psychiatrists), and he has precious few friends whom he hasn't alienated or betrayed. Harry uses the chaos of his life as fodder for his writing, angering his friends, lovers, and family, who find thinly veiled (and rarely flattering) portraits of themselves in his work. Drowning his growing misery in pills and sex, Harry finds himself invited to receive an award at a college in upstate New York which he attended, but never graduated from. However, he has a hard time finding anyone who will attend the weekend-long symposium with him: his girlfriend Fay (Elisabeth Shue) has just left him to marry his friend Larry (Billy Crystal); his best friend Richard (Bob Balaban) is afraid he's about to have a heart attack; his former wife/analyst Joan (Kirstie Alley) refuses to let him take their son, and his one-time sister-in-law Lucy (Judy Davis) is literally ready to kill him. Undaunted, Harry hires a hooker, Cookie (Hazelle Goodman), kidnaps his son, forces Richard to come along, and heads upstate, where disaster awaits. A stellar cast appears in small roles and episodes from Harry's stories, including Robin Williams, Demi Moore, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Eric Bogosian, Amy Irving, Richard Benjamin, Mariel Hemingway, and Julie Kavner. more..

Director: Woody Allen

Starring: Woody Allen, Kirstie Alley, Caroline Aaron,Bob Balaban,Richard Benjamin

Reviews

  • Woody Allen's strongest and most mordantly funny movie in years, even if it is also his bleakest.

    Ruthe Stein - The San Francisco Chronicle

    19 January 2013

  • Deconstructing Harry is Woody Allen's naughty-boy confessional movie, a disquietingly candid and funny portrait of a pathological narcissist.

    Owen Gleiberman - Entertainment Weekly

    19 January 2013

  • This poisonous, brazenly autobiographical comedy shows off the best of Mr. Allen's misanthropic humor.

    Elvis Mitchell - The New York Times

    19 January 2013

  • A bravura act of self-revelation, its vivid portrait of one man's fears, fantasies and neuroses uses a mixture of reality, imagination and comedy to create one of the writer-director's most involving films.

    Kenneth Turan - Los Angeles Times

    19 January 2013

  • This is in many ways his most revealing film, his most painful, and if it also contains more than his usual quotient of big laughs, what was it the man said? "We laugh, that we may not cry."

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    19 January 2013

Awards

  • Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen

    Academy Awards (1998)

     
  • Bogey Awards, Germany (1998)

  • Best Art House Film (Millor película d'autor)

    Butaca Awards (1998)

     
  • Best Foreign Film (Melhor Filme Estrangeiro)

    Cinema Brazil Grand Prize (2000)

     
  • Woody Allen

    European Film Awards (1998)