The Set-up: When Harry Met Sally gets a lot of guff from folks who saw it as warmed-over Woody Allen. Yeah, one can see that argument. It's set in New York, after all. And there's a lot of neurotic behavior going on, so much so that you want to slap somebody now and again.
But the big difference is tone. I don't know anybody who talks like the folks talk in a Woody Allen movie (Allen writes all the parts, after all, and they all have a tendency to sound like him), but I know a lot of people who talk like the folks in this scene. And there's another quality missing from When Harry Met Sally.
Cruelty.
Specifically, Woody Allen's cruelty. Let's compare scenes. In When Harry Met Sally, there's a scene (the one immediately preceding the one featured) where Harry runs into his ex-wife and her new lover at a "Sharper Image."
Compare that to the scene in Manhattan where Isaac Davis (Woody) meets Mary Wilkie's (Diane Keaton) ex in a store, and it's Wallace Shawn. Shawn's character has been held up as this towering intellect, and, after seeing him, Woody expresses shock that he's "this little homunculus." I forget which critic said it, but it was pointed out that Allen picked the one guy in New York homelier than Allen to play that role, whereas in Harry, Ira, is fairly normal-looking, if slightly uncomfortable in the situation. Allen stacks the deck in his favor. Reiner doesn't make a point of it--it's the humiliation of meeting the new lover in the store that's the point, not his appearance. But Allen had enough ego to belabor (and take advantage of) the point.
I love Woody Allen movies, but I like the people in When Harry Met Sally better...and I recognize them as human beings, as opposed to merely being entertaining aspects of Woody Allen's psyche.
There's nothing fancy about the presentation of the scene. Reiner starts by focusing on the object of discussion and moves out from there to include the participants, all shot at eye-level, and with an emphasis on expression. There are no fancy moves with the camera (a trademark of the style when cinematographer Barry Sonenfeld directs!); it's all in the presentation and how the scene is played. Allen is the better director than Reiner compositionally, but Reiner's is a classic, unpretentious shooting style that doesn't emphasize close-ups for conversion to television, although it is framed with the participants grouped in the middle of the screen, should that prove necessary. Reiner is shooting a movie, not TV, and it's evident in every frame. And his handling of Ephron's material is miles ahead of her directing her own stuff (Bewitched? Hello?)
The scene feels real. Relatable. And we're not borrowing from Bergman or Chekhov or Tolstoy to get there.*
This is a lot of complaining about a film-maker I like. Even watching Allen's uneasy musical Everyone Say I Love You (which I did a couple of days ago) exhibits a multitude of joys. I guess the issue I have is with the film's critics using the phrase "warmed-over Woody Allen."
To which I reply "This is a bad thing?"
Maybe I have a fondness for this scene because I have so much stuff in storage (Gotta clean that stuff out...).**
The Scene: Friends Harry Burns (Billy Crystal) and Sally Albright (Meg Ryan) are on a shopping outing, when Harry runs into his ex-wife Helen and her new lover, Ira, which devastates him. The feelings spill over later while helping their best friends Jess and Marie (Bruno Kirby and *sigh* Carrie Fisher) move in together.
Action!
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Marie: All right, all right, We’ll let Harry and Sally be the judge. What do you think?
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Jess: Case closed.
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Marie: It’s so awful there’s no way to even begin to explain what’s so awful about it.
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Marie: If we had an extra room we could put all of your things there, including your bar-stools.
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Jess: I have good taste
Marie: Everybody thinks they have good taste and a sense of humor but they couldn’t possibly all have good taste..
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Sally: Harry…
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Harry: I know, I know, I shouldn't have done it….
Sally: Harry, you’re going to have to try and find a way of not expressing every feeling that you have every moment that you have them.
Harry: Oh, Really?
Sally: Yes! There are times and places for things.
Harry: Well, the next time they’re giving a lecture series on social graces, will you let me know, ‘cause I’ll sign up.
Sally: Hey! You don’t have to take your anger out on me!
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Sally: What’s that supposed to mean?
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Sally: Don’t be ridiculous!
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Harry: If you’re so "over Joe," how come you’re not seeing anyone?
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Sally: Yes.
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When Harry Met Sally
Words by Nora Ephron
Pictures by Barry Sonnenfeld and Rob Reiner
When Harry Met Sally is available on DVD from MGM Home Video.
* Also the phrase "warmed-over Woody Allen" should be more correctly "warmed-over Annie Hall" as Allen does a fine job of exploring different territory in his films. Sure, there are familiar aspects from film to film, but he explores other genre's than simply "relationship comedies"
* You're probably asking yourself, "Why didn't he use the "fake orgasm" scene? It's the one everybody remembers!" There are a lot of reasons: It's the one everyone remembers; it's a one-joke premise--that Reiner and Ryan draw out to great lengths with the final whip-snap of the tag-line; It's really funny and true, but not terribly convincing when it's a series of frames; the exquisite timing of the line "I'll have what she's having" (delivered by Rob Reiner's mother) cannot be duplicated in this format, which makes it not worth doing; and the capper--too many exclamation marks!!
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