Deconstructing Harry

""Who are you?" "It's me, Ken!" "...Ken?" "Look at this guy! You created me, now you doesn't recognize me?""

Deconstructing Harry is a film by Woody Allen.

Successful author Harry Block has been routinely mining his real life for material. After his latest divorce, he's been dating a young fan of his work - who just left him. Now he has to deal with an upcoming trip to his alma mater, and some of his characters start checking up on him in real life. A pretty poignant case of Family-Unfriendly Aesop follows.

""To Evil! It keeps things hummin'.""
 * Affably Evil:.

"Harry: "How do you know so much?" Ken: "Well... I'm just you. Thinly disguised. You gave me a little more maturity. And a different name.""
 * Author Avatar: To some degree, each and every main character from Harry's stories resembles him.
 * Brick Joke: One of Harry's (perhaps unfinished) short stories deals with an actor (Mel) going out of focus as he's shooting what appears to be a TV commercial. Later on,.
 * The Cameo: Robin Williams as the out-of-focus actor, Tobey Maguire as a young Author Avatar.
 * Canon Sue: In-universe: "Ken", the main character in Harry's last novel, comes off as a charming, laid-back guy, all too happy to explain what went wrong in Harry's life. He's right every time.

"Harry: "Every hooker I ever speak to tells me that it beats the hell out of waitressing. Waitressing's gotta be the worst fucking job in the world.""
 * Critical Psychoanalysis Failure: Joan might have needed a lot of help after and getting divorced; we know she didn't take it well.
 * Death by Childbirth: Happened to Harry's mom; his father never quite forgave him for that.
 * Family-Unfriendly Aesop: Whatever it is.
 * Functional Addict: Harry sees himself as one, as far as booze and anti-anxiety pills are concerned. Other characters don't agree.
 * The Fundamentalist: Played with, twice:
 * In one of Harry's stories, this is the reason his marriage to his former psychoanalyst failed: after the birth of their son, she rediscovered her Jewish roots, became obsessed with faith and tradition, and ended up leaving Harry for a dashing Israeli patient. In real life, though,.
 * Then there's Bert, Harry's brother-in-law; an observant Jew who Harry despises to the point of becoming estranged from his sister..
 * High-Class Call Girl: The Asian prostitute in one of the stories-within-a-story.
 * Hollywood Atheist: Mostly played for laughs, of the smug variety.
 * Hooker with a Heart of Gold: Cookie.
 * The Lancer: Larry.
 * Laser-Guided Karma: Borrow a sick friend's apartment, pretend it's your bachelor pad, use his name to introduce yourself to a High-Class Call Girl... hey, that's The Grim Reaper at the door. And he won't believe you're not the guy.
 * May-December Romance: Applied twice. Fay, Harry's last girlfriend,.
 * Meaningful Name: Harry Block, although Writer's Block is just a symptom of his depression.
 * Morality Pet: Played with. Harry's very fond of his young son Hilliard, who he enjoys spending time with; too bad all his life lessons to the kid are variations on Good Is Boring.
 * Muse Abuse:
 * Pygmalion Plot: Seems to have played a major role in Harry and Fay's romantic relationship; he considered her "a fan, then a pupil", but in the end he fell in love and she didn't truly reciprocate his feelings.
 * Show Within a Show: Harry's stories within the film - and then The Reveal that.
 * The Shrink: Joan and her fictional counterpart.
 * Sidekick: Harry's friend and colleague Richard.
 * Unproblematic Prostitution: Played with: Cookie comes off as a self-assured, reasonably content sex worker, who accepts Harry's offer of even if she met him a couple hours before (and therefore has no idea whether he could posit a danger to her). She's also treated far more nicely than any other female character in-universe.
 * Sidekick: Harry's friend and colleague Richard.
 * Unproblematic Prostitution: Played with: Cookie comes off as a self-assured, reasonably content sex worker, who accepts Harry's offer of even if she met him a couple hours before (and therefore has no idea whether he could posit a danger to her). She's also treated far more nicely than any other female character in-universe.

""And of course there's Jane, or, as you pathetically disguised her... Janet.""
 * Villainous BSOD: Once the group arrive at Harry's alma mater,.
 * What the Hell, Hero?: Happens at least twice, with characters from Harry's stories ("Ken" and "Helen", the latter being a mix between his ex-wife and his sister) lecturing him on the mistakes he made in his personal life.
 * Write Who You Know: With almost no exception, Harry's characters are thinly-veiled versions of people he knows; considering in real life he's a bit of a Magnificent Bastard, every time he's got a new novel out, at least one of his personal relationships goes very sour.

"Lucy: "Oh big fucking deal, you gave her large breasts!" Harry: "Leslie, please..." Lucy: "Lucy. I'm Lucy, motherfucker. Not Leslie.""
 * Even he occasionally can't tell the difference between real life and fiction.


 * Your Cheating Heart: In his own words, Harry's cheated on each and every one of his wives.