When Harry Met Sally... Movie Review
When Harry Met Sally... Review

"When Harry Met Sally..." Overview

Rating: R
1989
Cast and Crew
Director : Rob ReinerProducer : Rob Reiner,Andrew Scheinmann
Screenwiter : Nora Ephron
Starring : Billy Crystal,Meg Ryan,Carrie Fisher,Bruno Kirby
It was the 80s, the time when acid washed jeans went, the Ephrons could turn
out a decent script, Rob Reiner could direct something worth watching, and
Billy Crystal hadn’t succumbed to the sequel curse. And Meg Ryan? Well, Meg
Ryan’s still pretty much Meg Ryan: sickeningly Top 40, an actress who seemingly
lives in fear of picking a role that could be too controversial (never mind her
recent marital scuffle).
When Harry Met Sally... closed out a decade fondly remembered by Grosse Pointe
Blank and Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion and darkly satirized by Bret
Easton Ellis’ American Psycho. It's a romantic comedy that has spawned a
plethora of knockoffs so terrifying that, like its counterparts in all other
genres, it may have been better if the script were never penned, if only to
save us from the aftermath. But still, we have to give When Harry Met Sally...
credit for what it did: Make one of the few romance films that bears any kind
of truth without also being a dark comedy.
Two people who want absolutely nothing to do with each other in the beginning
of the story, Harry Burns (Billy Crystal) and Sally Albright (Meg Ryan) end up
driving together to move into separate apartments in New York City after they
both graduate from college. By the time they reach the Big Apple, they’re
talking about their disbelief that friendship and sex can coexist, and as we
all know from experience (and now cliché) they eventually hook up -- it’s
unavoidable.
Rather than make the mistake that countless copycats have by making their tryst
a quick cut away from a sex scene to appease the MPAA, When Harry Met Sally...
takes its time to the inevitable end. And I mean takes its time: For 10 years
Harry's and Sally's paths weave back and forth like Robert Downey Jr. trying to
walk the white line. At years-long intervals they befriend each other, drift
apart, befriend each other again, and, at long last, find themselves testing
their own theory (to the inevitable happy ending).
As for why When Harry Met Sally... still contains cinematic merit a dozen years
after its initial release, it actually has all of the strengths that make a
movie last. Nora Ephron’s dialogue is sharp, witty, and intelligent, Billy
Crystal shows us a movie in which he (mostly) acts instead of does a stand up
routine with other actors present, Rob Reiner directs a simple story instead of
trying to preach on God-knows-what-tangent, and even run-of-the-mill Meg Ryan
takes a huge risk with her squeaky clean image by faking an orgasm in a deli (a
now-legendary scene worth the rental alone). And don't forget Harry Connick
Jr.'s stellar soundtrack.
While to this day it is a mark of masculine shame to admit to actually liking
the movie, I personally am not afraid to give it my seal of approval. And I'm
awfully manly.
The new DVD release features a ton of extra footage, commentary track, and a
making-of documentary. Worth checking out.
The day they met.
Reviewer: James Brundage





