Harold Movie Review
Harold Review

"Harold" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : T. Sean ShannonProducer : Cuba Gooding Jr.,Morris S. Levy,William Sherak,Jason Shuman
Screenwiter : T. Sean Shannon,Greg Fields
Starring : Spencer Breslin,Cuba Gooding Jr.,Ally Sheedy,Stella Maeve,Nikki Blonsky,Rachel Dratch,Dave Attell,Chris Parnell,Colin Quinn,Suzanne Shepherd,Fred Willard
Late in the inept comedy Harold, the title character (Spencer Breslin) arrives
at a friend's house, and the pal's father comes to the front door. A close-up
lingers on the dad as if to say "Check it out, a really fun cameo!" The only
problem is we have no idea who this actor is. And that's because he's not an
actor -- he's the director's brother. If you think putting an unknown sibling
in a movie is funny, stick around.
Despite Harold being remarkably amateurish, the concept is there, as you'd
expect from a long-time Saturday Night Live veteran like director/co-writer T.
Sean Shannon. A teenage kid named Harold has a bizarre case of early baldness
and an attitude to match. He dresses horribly, walks with a hunched, old-man
shuffle, and loves Murder, She Wrote. He's a cranky version of 14 Going on 74.
When his mother (a useless Ally Sheedy) moves the family to a nearby town,
Harold beomes the focus of ridicule at his new school. Cuba Gooding Jr., a rare
bright spot in the film, plays the well-meaning school janitor who takes a
liking to dippy Harold and becomes one of his few friends.
The rough draft screenplay for Harold must have said "hijinks ensue" a lot.
Harold's troubles and escapades play like they were developed by a bunch of
kids Harold's age. Harold is pummeled playing dodgeball in gym class. Harold is
chased by his horny senior-citizen neighbor. Harold gets ready for the big
go-kart race. Yes, the final act includes a lifeless go-kart race, a sequence
that lives somewhere between a middle-school film class version of Breaking
Away and a Little Rascals episode.
Harold is filled with competent actors -- Gooding, Sheedy, Chris Parnell,
celluloid sunshine Nikki Blonsky, to name a few -- but nearly every scene
screams novice filmmaker. Harold confidently struts along, seemingly unaware of
its lackluster script and distinct lack of professionalism.
And I'm not sure Breslin is the right choice for the lead role. The young man
is certainly self-assured, but the majority of his lines sound like they're
coming from a precocious know-it-all letting it all hang out at an audition.
If there's one thing Harold wears well, it's innocence. For goodness' sake,
even the strippers in the movie wear bikini tops. If Shannon and co-writer Greg
Fields (who hadn't written a produced film in ten years) could have played up
that angle more effectively, Harold would have some hope. Instead, we're stuck
with telegraphed laughs, if any. By the way, in an interview Shannon confesses
the idea came from a family get-together where two younger kids were left with
baldness patterns as a prank. Yikes, this just gets worse and worse.
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Review by Norm Schrager
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