The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Three More

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The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Three More
Directed byWes Anderson
Screenplay byWes Anderson
Based on"The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar"
"The Swan"
"The Ratcatcher"
"Poison"
by Roald Dahl
Produced by
Starring
Cinematography
Edited by
Production
companies
Distributed byNetflix
Release date
  • March 15, 2024 (2024-03-15) (worldwide)
Running time
88 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Three More is a 2024 American fantasy anthology film written, directed and co-produced by Wes Anderson, based on four short stories by Roald Dahl. This is the second film adaptation of a Dahl work directed by Anderson, following Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009). It stars Benedict Cumberbatch, Ralph Fiennes, Dev Patel, Ben Kingsley, Richard Ayoade, and Rupert Friend, all playing different roles throughout.[1]

The film was released on 15 March 2024.

Plot[edit]

The anthology consists of four short film vignettes, each one based on the corresponding short story by Dahl.

1. The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar[edit]

2. The Swan[edit]

Adapted from the 1977 short story with the same title.

3. The Rat Catcher[edit]

The penultimate short film is based on the story The Ratcatcher from the 1953 collection.

A rat-catcher (Ralph Fiennes) comes to a petrol station to combat a rat infestation there. Station attendant Claud (Rupert Friend) and reporter (Richard Ayoade) take him to a hayrick across the road and the ratter scatters some oats around the hayrick. He repeats that for 2 more days and on the fourth day he places poisoned oats in little piles at every corner of the hayrick.

Arriving the next day and demanding a sack to collect the expected large number of dead rats, he is peeved to find not a single one. To regain the waning respect of Claud and the reporter, the rat-catcher performs a demonstration: he takes a live rat out of one of his pockets and a ferret out of another pocket, puts both animals down his shirt and then has the ferret kill the rat on his body. The catcher then performs the second demonstration as a bet how he can kill a rat without using his hands: he takes another live rat out of his knapsack, ties it to a petrol pump and kills it with his teeth. Having spat the dead animal's blood out and retrieved the won money, he states that confectionery factories and chocolate-makers use rat blood to make liquorice and then leaves. Thoroughly disgusted, Claud and the reporter are relieved to see him go.

4. Poison[edit]

Concluding vignette of the anthology is a short film adaptation of the story published in 1950.

The film ends with an original song by Jarvis Cocker titled "Rules For Being a Fictional Writer" being played with the closing titles.[2]

Cast[edit]

Reception[edit]

Roger Moore in his Movie Nation blog gave the film a rating of 3.5/4, concluding with,[3]

The way Anderson uses the actors, deadpan performances (mostly), narrating in a stacatto style, parked in front of clever settings in varying degrees of surreal “realism,” is almost animation... His style can be grating, especially that self-aware mugging-to-the-camera that he insists on. But here we see its greatest application, deadpan turns played underneath screwball-comedy-speed dialogue...
The real Dahl was a real piece of work. But the work is timeless, and Anderson has rendered it in its most entertaining cinematic form with this short story collection feature film.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Peralta, Diego (2024-03-11). "Wes Anderson's Netflix Short Films Will Be Combined Into a Single Anthology". Collider. Retrieved 2024-03-14.
  2. ^ "Wes Anderson's Oscar-Winning 'The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar' to Be Repackaged Into Netflix Anthology". thewrap.com. Retrieved 2024-03-14.
  3. ^ "Netflixable? Wes Anderson adds "Three Other" Roald Dahl stories to his Oscar-winning short film, "The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar"". Retrieved 1 June 2024.

External links[edit]