To dismiss "Henry
Poole is Here" as a maudlin rumination on faith and religion
would be to ignore the inherent human struggles and blatant annihilation
anxieties rumbling beneath the surface, which are exposed only through
the central “religious” plot device that unites a group
of people who would otherwise have little to do with each other.
Faith acts as a simple fulcrum to expose incontrovertible feelings
of disappointment, rage and lost hope.
Surface thematic interpretation aside, systemic cultural incertitude
surrounding sincere emotion and the fear of complex mortal thoughts
outside of the minutia that society is socialized to value and
prioritize will likely cause most to ignore "Henry Poole"’s
deeper human themes, which is really a shame as it’s one
of the better films thus far in 2008.
When he is unable to convince homeowners to sell a house he desperately
wants, an angry and disconsolate Henry Poole (Luke Wilson) settles
for a dilapidated house down the street. Settling into his routine
of getting drunk by himself and eating frozen pizza, Henry is
interrupted by an enthusiastic neighbour named Esperanza (Adriana
Barazza) who believes a watermark on the side of his house to
be the face of Jesus.
Given that Henry moved to the neighbourhood to be left alone,
her bubbling persistence and endless religious prattle is particularly
unwelcome and only complicated when he meets the mute daughter
(Morgan Lily) of his much more affable neighbour Dawn (Radha Mitchell).
Through his newly established relationships, Henry is forced to
again battle the learned belief that hope and expectation begets
pain and disappointment.