This film feels like Hartley has been handed a Bourne or a Bond movie to direct and maintained his own style and low-budget aesthetic while thoroughly enjoying and deconstructing his new toy.
Fay Grim (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:85
Fresh:37
Rotten:48
Average Rating:5.4/10
Consensus: Fay Grim is too concerned with its own farcical premise to present a coherent, involving story.
Runtime: 1 hr 58 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Hal Hartley's 1997 film HENRY FOOL tells the story of Simon Grim (James Urbaniak), a garbage collector in Queens whose burgeoning talent as a poet is spurred on to greatness by Henry (Thomas Jay... Hal Hartley's 1997 film HENRY FOOL tells the story of Simon Grim (James Urbaniak), a garbage collector in Queens whose burgeoning talent as a poet is spurred on to greatness by Henry (Thomas Jay Ryan), a failed novelist with a shady past. Though the film gave Hartley art-house success, it was an unlikely candidate for sequeldom--let alone one that's a spy thriller--but, years later, that what he's given us with FAY GRIM. Henry has been missing for seven years, and Simon's sister, Fay (Parker Posey), is a single parent raising her and Henry's 14-year-old son, Ned (Liam Aiken), in Woodside, Queens. Simon is in prison for helping Henry escape from the law, but Fay is given a chance to spring him when she is approached by CIA agent Fulbright (Jeff Goldblum), who asks her to go Paris to obtain Henry's "confessions," a series of notebooks he filled with international political secrets. Once in Paris, Fay is preyed upon by operatives other than those she is meant to deal with, and things don't go as planned. An unwitting pawn in a complex international scheme set in motion by her missing husband, Fay finds herself traveling to Turkey for answers. Fans of Hartley's work will be pleased with this oddball take on the espionage genre, in which a permanently tilted camera mirrors the loopy proceedings. Though Posey's Fay is a stereotypical "clueless American abroad" in designer duds, and her adventure seems at first to be a silly game, bodies begin piling up, and the tale gathers real weight. FAY GRIM is a unique addition to Hartley's singular body of work, and a treat for indie film fans regardless of their familiarity with HENRY FOOL. [More]
Starring: Parker Posey, Jeff Goldblum, Leo Fitzpatrick, Chuck Montgomery
Starring: Parker Posey, Jeff Goldblum, Leo Fitzpatrick, Chuck Montgomery, James Urbaniak, Saffron Burrows, Liam Aiken, Elina Lowensohn, Thomas Jay Ryan
Director: Hal Hartley
Director: Hal Hartley
Screenwriter: Hal Hartley
Producer: Hal Hartley, Michael S. Ryan, Martin Hagemann, Jason Kliot, Ted Hope
Composer: Hal Hartley
Studio: Magnolia Pictures
Reviews for Fay Grim
a work with heady theological implications that is brilliant, funny, iconoclastic, and so deeply true that it is almost too beautiful to bear
Slyly, almost imperceptibly comedic, Fay Grim is indeed a film by Hal Hartley, who wrote, directed, edited and scored the film. But it's also Parker Posey's film
The majority of the signs point to a director on the decline. Or not, maybe. It's complicated.
"We don't buy for a minute the motivations behind any of the large number of characters, and Posey is nowhere near able to carry the movie."
What lures the film into disaster, is that [director] Hartley lets slip his sense of humor (always his strongest asset) and begins to believe his own plot.
Fay Grim arrives like a breath of fresh air in a stale summer of big budget sequels. It's smart, breezy, serious and silly. It also allows Parker Posey to shine.
Luckily, there is Hartley's immense wit to carry it through, but wit can be a dangerous gift, especially when the capacity to be clever overwhelms all else.
Hartley pretzels his faux spy plot into "Syriana"-like knots and ends up with a fascinating if somewhat flawed absurdist romp.
The picture is a misfire, but not a crash, and signals a newfound desire on Hartley's part to return to his roots and explore how he used to conduct business.
Fay Grim is a farce in which people die and lives are ruined. Which is to say, it's peculiarly funny, but you have to be an existentialist with lightning-fast reflexes to get all the jokes.
Oy Fay! Starts out a winner but takes a left turn in Europe and turns out pretty Grim.
A fun whirligig of a thriller that comes dangerously close to killing the buzz from its idiosyncratic delights, but manages to survive (mostly) intact.
The joke in Hal Hartley's deadpan semi-comedy Fay Grim is that the smart, self-aware characters can never see what's right in front of them.
A stunningly abysmal sequel to 1998's very interesting Henry Fool. Even the appealing Posey can do little to redeem this totally misguided, convoluted disaster.
Despite its imperfections, Fay Grim is worth seeing for Posey's and Goldblum's performances and particularly for the witty, literate dialogue.
"Fay Grim" is the most inarticulate and grueling of all Hal Hartley's films, and a complete waste of time.
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June 13, 2007:
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May 04, 2007:
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April 28, 2007:
Trailer & Poster review ![]()
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