Albuquerque Journal

DENSELY VIBRANT

‘Book of Henry’ a touching family drama, crime thriller and comedy

- BY COLIN COVERT

The best films are the ones that require some active, alert viewing. They depend upon a degree of audience interpreta­tion and provide a minimum of predigeste­d pablum. They are films that cannot be reviewed, let alone discussed, in the traditiona­l way. They are dense and vibrant, and they keep us off balance until the final fade-out — ideally, even longer.

I don’t want to oversell the virtues of that approach in “The Book of Henry,” a movie I found irresistib­le precisely because it is so confoundin­g. It’s not pursuing the complex ambiguity of a

Stanley Kubrick film.

It is solid, well-crafted entertainm­ent made remarkable by how many genre shifts and changes of emotional tone it hits as it progresses.

The film is directed by Colin Trevorrow, who gave us amusing doses of suspense, humor and sci-fi in the fine little indie love story “Safety Not Guaranteed” and the studio blockbuste­r “Jurassic World.” Those films wove their diverse moods together into a single rich whole.

“The Book of Henry” is something different and mysterious. It features plotlines diverging, converging and evolving as the film progresses. It’s a touching family drama, a serious crime thriller and a comedy about kids who act adult and immature parents who break the rules.

I won’t describe the action of the film in detail, because the less known, the better. Without wandering into spoiler territory, I can note a few things. It is set in a small East Coast town that looks as safe and bucolic as any Norman Rockwell community. Naomi Watts leads the cast as Susan, a single mother raising two boys. Her first, 10-ish Henry (Jaeden Lieberher, outstandin­g in “Midnight Special” and “St. Vincent”), isn’t simply precocious — he’s the textbook definition of genius. His mother keeps him in a standard school rather than a gifted kids’ academy to help him develop the skills he’d need to grow up as a healthy, socially oriented, productive adult. And it works: He’s smart without ever being a smartass. His little brother, Peter (Jacob Tremblay, exceptiona­l in “Room”), seems more like a standard-issue great child.

Susan clearly loved Henry before he was a prodigy and doesn’t favor him above Peter, even though he handles the family finances like a hedge fund manager and his witty, winning conversati­ons are abnormally precise. Mom stays at work waitressin­g in the nearby diner, even though Henry’s stock wizardry has made that financiall­y needless. Other than small vices like playing graphic video war games and drinking with her sassy co-worker, Sheila (Sarah Silverman), she is as normal as blueberry pie.

Trevorrow introduces his setting and characters with the warmhearte­d glow of a Spielberg film that focuses on the experience of being a kid. He has a similar aptitude for directing children, yet in large part, “The Book of Henry” is a story about innocence lost and the troubles of reclaiming it. Not all children’s stories provide handy happy endings, and this one falls deeper and deeper down an ever less-lightheart­ed rabbit hole. It’s no accident that the centerpiec­e of the film is Watts. Who else can spin empathetic and relatable performanc­es spanning emotions from humor to numbness, despair, joy, confusion and misdirecti­on?

The idyllic neighborho­od unexpected­ly turns into a menacing battlegrou­nd, creating a child-in-danger movie with a distinctiv­ely Hitchcocki­an feel. The boys and Henry’s cute classmate and neighbor Maggie (charismati­c Maddie Ziegler, from the reality series “Dance Moms”) are increasing­ly called to look angry, scared and vulnerable, and they are great at it. Henry’s resourcefu­lness is crucial to addressing the scary situation that develops, but it’s Susan who carries the weight of the audience’s fear. “Henry” slips from a coming-of-age story for a child to a coming-to-responsibi­lity story for an adult.

This is a poignant, frequently funny film that moves into unexpected dark subjects. That means that it’s too independen­t-minded for a mass audience hoping to forget the bad surprises of human life. That’s just what makes “The Book of Henry” feel so valuable to me.

 ?? COURTESY OF ALISON COHEN ROSA/FOCUS FEATURES ?? Jaeden Lieberher, left, and Jacob Tremblay in a scene from “The Book of Henry.”
COURTESY OF ALISON COHEN ROSA/FOCUS FEATURES Jaeden Lieberher, left, and Jacob Tremblay in a scene from “The Book of Henry.”
 ?? COURTESY OF ALISON COHEN ROSA/FOCUS FEATURES ?? Dean Norris and Naomi Watts in a scene from “The Book of Henry.”
COURTESY OF ALISON COHEN ROSA/FOCUS FEATURES Dean Norris and Naomi Watts in a scene from “The Book of Henry.”

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