
Though Long Island indie filmmaker Hal Hartley has worked fairly steadily since his heyday in the 90s, the movies he made in the 00s and 10s didn’t seem to gain as much traction, even among the kind of cinephiles who previously championed his brainy comedies. As far as I can tell this is his first feature of the 2020s, and while it feels undernourished at 75 minutes, it is by no means a minor work and is certainly one of the funniest movies he’s ever made. His favorite leading man, Bill Sage, is on hand, looking better than ever, as a man who could well be a stand-in for Hartley. Joseph Fulton is a beloved director of romantic-comedies who seems to have been out of the game for a while. We first see him at a NYC church cemetery, inquiring of the skeptical groundskeeper, Leonard (Robert John Burke, another Hartley regular), about a job as his assistant. Given Fulton’s age appropriate outfit—blue jeans, grey sport coat over black T—Leonard justifiably wonders why someone as old and overqualified as him wants a job in “husbandry,” and they have a lively conversation about the working life. As it turns out, Fulton isn’t hard up for a job. He just wants to do something that utilizes his hands and sends him home “tired at the end of the day.”
As Leonard and a number of others who meet him on this fateful day comment, Fulton seems to be going through a late midlife crisis (he’s 58), but the reasons for his sudden change in career trajectory are something more subtle, and Hartley interrogates his protagonist’s state of mind in a series of philosophical conversations that lead to comic misunderstandings in the fashion of a classic American romantic comedy from the 70s or 80s, the kind that presumably Fulton directed and to which Hartley often gestures in his own work, though never this explicitly. Due to Fulton’s interest in the cemetery job, his meeting with his lawyer to draw up a will, and a mysterious unopened letter from the hospital that his niece/assistant Veronica (Katelyn Sparks) finds on the desk, a rumor soon spreads among friends, relatives, and strangers alike that Fulton is dying, and while it’s not a spoiler to reveal that he isn’t, the potboiler nature of the misunderstanding provides Hartley with fodder for the kind of existential jokes he is so fond of, and most of them—to borrow the metaphor of the movie’s title—land exactly where he wants them to. Fulton, we eventually figure out, is put off by anyone suggesting he’s at the end of his line. When he meets a scholar (Aido Johannes) who’s writing a book about him, he refuses to get involved because he doesn’t want to hear the woman’s “theories” about his work, which would imply that work is finished. When he drops in on another writer, an elderly woman (Kathleen Chalfant) who seems to be in assisted living, he admits reluctantly that he’s not sure if he wants to be around in a future where competition for water is the most pressing concern of the day. The friend, whose opinions reveal a mind that isn’t about to call it quits anytime soon, feels the opposite: “Change is always interesting.”
With each additional encounter, which includes Fulton’s present lover, a popular TV superhero actor (Kim Taff); his affectionate ex-wife (Edie Falco); a scriptwriter who thinks he may be Fulton’s son (Jeremy Hendrick); and a neighbor (King Mustafa Obafemi) who gets squeamish when all this talk about death hits a crescendo in Fulton’s apartment after everyone has spontaneously assembled there, the movie raises the comic and thematic stakes with ever more profitable returns. Hartley keeps the tempos brisk, the characterizations distinct, the musical cues outlandishly on point. Now deep in his own late period, he’s never been this entertaining.
Now playing in Tokyo at Euro Space Shibuya (03-3461-0211).
Where to Land home page in Japanese
photo (c) Hal Hartley/Possible Films, LLC














