How Harry Became a Tree
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (March 2019) |
How Harry Became a Tree | |
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Directed by | Goran Paskaljević |
Starring | Colm Meaney Adrian Dunbar |
Release date |
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Running time | 99 minutes |
Country | Italy-France-United Kingdom-Ireland |
Language | English |
How Harry Became a Tree is a 2001 Italian-French-British-Irish drama film directed by Goran Paskaljević.[1] It is based on a Chinese story Lao Dan by Yang Zhengguang and deals allegorically with the Irish and Balkan civil wars.[2]
Plot
[edit]In rural Ireland in 1924, Harry Maloney (Colm Meaney), believing "a man is measured by his enemies", nurses an unjustified enmity for George O'Flaherty, who owns the local pub and most of the businesses in the area and is the local matchmaker. When Harry's son Gus (Cillian Murphy), upon whom Harry regularly heaps mental and verbal abuse falls for George's maidservant, Eileen, George helps put the two together. George's seduction of Eileen gives Harry the opportunity to create a scandal, despite the effect on his own family.
Cast
[edit]- Colm Meaney - Harry Maloney
- Adrian Dunbar - George
- Cillian Murphy - Gus Maloney
- Kerry Condon - Eileen
- Pat Laffan - Father O'Connor
- Gail Fitzpatrick - Margaret
Reception
[edit]Reviewing the film in Hot Press, Craig Fitzsimons wrote "though flawed, How Harry Became A Tree would probably qualify as the most effective example of homegrown bucolic melodrama since Neil Jordan's The Butcher Boy adaptation".[3]
The New York Times said that it was "a comic and improbably loving meditation on hate, absurdist but never abstract, using Ireland in 1924 as a stand-in for the former Yugoslavia."[4]
References
[edit]- ^ Rooney, David (14 September 2001). "How Harry Became a Tree". Variety. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
- ^ "How Harry Became a Tree". Irish Film Institute. Retrieved 2023-11-17.
- ^ Fitzsimons, Craig. "How Harry Became A Tree". Hotpress. Retrieved 2023-11-17.
- ^ Henneberger, Melinda (2001-09-10). "ARTS ABROAD; The Trouble With Harry? He Just Loves to Hate". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-05-16.
External links
[edit]- 2001 films
- Italian drama films
- French drama films
- British drama films
- Irish drama films
- 2001 drama films
- Films set in Ireland
- Films set in 1924
- English-language Italian films
- English-language French films
- 2000s English-language films
- 2000s Italian films
- 2000s French films
- 2000s British films
- 2000s Irish films
- Cattleya films
- 2000s drama film stubs