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Released: 2005-06-21 Rating:
More Details: In the Realms of the Unreal - The Mystery of Henry Darger In the Realms of the Unreal - The Mystery of Henry Darger @Amazon In the Realms of the Unreal - The Mystery of Henry Darger @aStore |
Description
Henry Darger, an elderly recluse, spent his childhood in Illinois's asylum for feeble-minded children and his adulthood working as a janitor. He lived a quiet, nearly solitary existence, but his imaginary life was exciting, colorful and sexually provocative. When he died in Chicago in 1973, his landlady discovered in his room 300 paintings, some over 10 feet long, and a 15,000-page illustrated novel (The Realms of the Unreal), which told the epic story of the virtuous Vivian Girls leading a child slave revolt against the evil Glandelinians. Featuring Dakota Fanning (Hide and Seek) and Larry Pine (The Royal Tenenbaums) as narrators and imaginative animation of Darger's work, OscarĀ® winner Jessica Yu (Breathing Lessons) brings to life one of the twentieth century's greatest self-taught artists.
Nice to see such an attentively made introduction to such a bizarre outsider figure ![]()
IN THE REALMS OF THE UNREAL is a 2004 documentary film by Jessica Yu introducing the life and work of Henry Darger. A major figure of "outsider art", Darger's work was only discovered after his death when his landlords found thousands of pages of text and paintings in his room. Through his long life, he was known to his few friends and associates only as a janitor in a local hospital. Secretly, he wrote a massive manuscript chronicling the rebellion of girl slaves in a fantasy world, painted with watercolors of the heroines and battles.
Yu has chosen three main narrators for the documentary. A little girl (Dakota Fanning, even) narrates Darger's biographical facts, while excerpts from Darger's autobiography are reads by an old man (Larry Pine), and texts from his fantasy epic are read by some fellow with a radio play delivery. In addition, we find interviews with people who knew Darger. Kiyoko Lerner, his landlady and now the caretaker of his legacy, is of course featured, as are some of his neighbours and an altar boy from his church. While everyone reports him to be an odd fellow, Yu avoids the controversial issue of Darger's mental health, preserving the ambiguity of whether he was mad or a mere eccentric. Similarly, the relation of Darger's work to sexual frustrations or the possibility of sexual abuse as a child are left out. But this is a mere introduction, and it's reasonable to expect the viewer to move on to other sources for contentious matters. My only real complaint is that Yu is not always content to let Darger's paintings speak for themselves. Rather, she has animated certain of Darger's scenes, which I feel distorts the paintings to a degree. While I think the film does not deserve a one-star rating for this as another reviewer awarded it, it is troubling.
Nonetheless, all in all this is a fine presentation of a remarkable figure. And if Darger's intrigues you, I'd recommend also discovering Adolf Wolfli, a Swiss madman whose life and work resembles Darger in several years.
This film provides great insight and compassion for Henry Darger ![]()
This video is a must for any admirer of Henry Darger's artwork. The combination of interviews with those who knew Darger, the narration by actress Dakota Fanning as the Vivian girls and the animations of Darger's drawings/collages provided insight into Henry Darger's mind and creative motivations.
Most videos about artists bore me because they are too reverent and put the artist on a pedestal unattainable by us mere mortals. Almost invariably some art historian or curator will attempt a too facile linear connection between the artist's inner creative life and the outward events/experiences of that life.
This is one of the best films about an artist I've ever seen. Jessuca Yu is compassionate about her subject without pitying him.
One of my favorites ![]()
Ranks up there with "Here Is Always Somewhere Else: The disappearance of Bas Jan Ader" and "How To Draw a Bunny." One of my favorite documentaries about art.
good movie ![]()
well made and beautiful crafted documentary film on henry darger, really puts you into his work from inside 4 stars!!!
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