Edmonton Journal

Oh Henry, you could have been so much better

- TINA HASSANNIA

The Book of Henry is about a boy, his mom, his little brother and the girl next door. That’s what Henry (Jaeden Lieberher) says through voice-over narration, but only at the end of the film.

There’s no purpose to such a contrived line other than screenwrit­er Gregg Hurwitz (a comicbook and crime-novel writer) and director Colin Trevorrow (director of the upcoming Star Wars: Episode IX) believing that their audience is stupid. The film’s premise is even dumber: Henry’s mother Susan (Naomi Watts) plans to kill child-abusing neighbour Glenn (Dean Norris) through a methodical­ly planned sniper mission that her 11-yearold genius son laid out through comprehens­ive notes and voice memos.

But wait, isn’t this supposed to be a feel-good family drama? The look and feel sure spell it out: Henry’s tree house looks like something out a Roald Dahl novel, chock full of Rube Goldberg contraptio­ns, intended to endear us to the world-weary 11-yearold; the younger, bespectacl­ed adorable brother Peter (Jacob

Tremblay) needs Henry’s help from school bullies; their mom’s corny bedtime routine features a lullaby and toy ukulele. But Hurwitz and Trevorrow don’t have the patience for a single genre, so they mash up a variety that include traumatic medical drama and a taking-justice-intoyour-own-hands thriller. Such Frankenste­in movie magic leads to a tone-deaf, ghoulish, campy and overwrough­t film.

The film makes no sense. Henry is the adult of the house, managing the finances, while Susan blows off steam from her waitressin­g job through video games and carousing with her floozie co-worker (Sarah Silverman, working far below what she deserves, but then again, the same goes for everyone cast in this movie). If that’s slightly believable, Henry’s stock trading acumen that has resulted in $700,000 in a bank account, is not. Susan shrugs off Henry’s practical suggestion­s to quit or buy a new car for no reason, making her sound silly, yet we somehow are to believe she can carry out murder.

Would it kill the screenwrit­er to maybe flesh out a character past the nanosecond devoted to each story element? Hurwitz and Trevorrow don’t have such patience, though, they’ve already fast-forwarded to the traumatizi­ng medical issue that lands a huge bomb in the middle of the movie, tonally shifting it with the abruptness of an earthquake. Without spoiling anything, let’s just say it accomplish­es little more than giving Susan a reason to start “adulting” again and gives Lee Pace a useless role as a handsome doctor to suggest what this movie might have been if Hurwitz and Trevorrow liked rom-coms.

About Henry’s murder plan, by the way: His titular book, which plots out every conceivabl­e detail, also includes rationales on why killing Glenn, a wellrespec­ted community man, is the only way to save his victim. Yet Henry’s efforts to expose the abuse are half-assed at best. He never once tries asking an adult like Susan to voice the complaint, for example. Getting away with murder, the film suggests, is easier than reporting child abuse.

The film’s convenient ending confirms that The Book of Henry is uninterest­ed in exploring the idea that powerful men can be infallible. In fact, there are no ideas at all here, just one contrived plot element set up to trigger off another. Think of The Book of Henry as a broken Rube Goldberg machine — all the cutesy steampunk doodads are for naught without proper planning to make it function.

 ?? FOCUS FEATURES ?? Jacob Tremblay, left, Jaeden Lieberher and Naomi Watts play three key roles in the mixed up The Book of Henry.
FOCUS FEATURES Jacob Tremblay, left, Jaeden Lieberher and Naomi Watts play three key roles in the mixed up The Book of Henry.

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