You know, I never hated Mondays. Don’t get me wrong, logistically, they’re a nightmare. You have two days, two and a half at most if you count Friday evening, but I personally think that’s cancelled out by somber feeling of a Sunday evening, and then you’re back at it for five days. So yes, Mondays weren’t great and it was a rare Monday that I’d wake up chipper and at it (but that’s rare any day since my mid teens, I suppose). But whatever the practical issues of a Monday, it was also the start of a new week; a new chance, a fresh start, fifty-two times a year. And one time a year, we get a New Year’s Day, the start of a new year. If Mondays, in some small way, felt like clean slate, then New Year’s Day is like the Super Bowl of fresh starts.
I’ve always thought it’s good to end a year the way you want the next one to start. I think that’s why we dress up, force ourselves out into the cold, surrounded by suburbanites who flock to my fair city to try and pack a year’s worth of missed opportunities into one night, to pay too much money for too few drinks (or too many), all while muscling your way through a crowd of people and peacocking so thick that you might as well be trying to leave a Walmart as the doors open on Black Friday and the crowd comes rushing in. The countdown and the ball drop get all the press, but New Year’s Day is important too. And for 2026, I want to start on a hopeful note. So I want to give to you as a final gift this festive period, a look at a movie about a fresh start. In the face of your own imminent death, but hey. Nobody’s perfect.
Meet Harold Crick. Harold lives a horrendously routine- and efficiency-based life. He is the absolute definition of no nonsense; no wonder he works for the IRS. He’s even the same amount of late for the same bus every morning. Of course, most people live routine lives, that’s not sad in itself, but he’s about to learn something about taking chances. His life is as rote and predictable as a network crime procedural until one morning, when he starts hearing a voice in his head narrating his every move. When he stopped, it stopped. You can see why this is alarming; most people don’t hear voices in their head, let alone the voice of a British woman who’s just talking about the things you’re doing. And that’s how Stranger Than Fiction begins. Will Ferrell’s first foray into more dramatic acting, you’d get whiplash if you jumped from Talladega Nights to this, his other live action film from 2006. Let’s get into it.
The voice in Ferrell’s Crick’s head is Karen Eiffel, played by Emma Thompson (Love Actually, The Remains of the Day), a celebrated author who’s about 10 years overdue for her next novel. She’s got a case of writer’s block so bad that her publisher sends Penny Escher, played by Queen Latifah (Set It Off, Chicago) to be her assistant and get her over the line. Karen is resistant and curmudgeonly, as is how we generally depict writers in media (and as one myself, I don’t have the courage to say it isn’t accurate), but her writer’s block is killing her. And while her narration is already so distracting that Harold can barely cope with it as he tries to audit the lovely and very principled baker Ana Pascal, played by Maggie Gyllenhaal (The Dark Knight, Donnie Darko), she just told Harold that he’s going to die because of his wristwatch. You’re already hearing voices and now it drops the dreaded “little did he know” in his head and then tells him he’s going to die. That’s a bad day.
Harold is indeed a reminder that we will all die some day and that our time here is painfully, cruelly, and demonstrably short. I’m reminded of a line Death speaks in The Sandman, saying that we all get what everyone gets, the time that we got. But that’s not exactly true, is it? I’ve always hated that line. Some get a day, some get a hundred years, some less, some more. Most people don’t know. Harold does. Harold has to go on with life knowing not only that he’s going to die, which is already tough enough for most people to deal with, as evidenced by the massive weight of media and literature devoted to reconciling that idea, but also when. Not vaguely, not some notion of a faraway death; Harold gets to know the moment is coming and soon. And yet he must choose to go on.
Now, on another day, I would go into great detail about how Harold’s lack of agency in life as a character in someone else’s book mirrors our own as we go through life in a society that pushes people to put aside their wants, needs, desires, and even their own identity at times for the sake of others’ comfort and fitting in. I could talk about the idea that choosing to die rather than running away from it is Harold’s most significant means of taking his agency. On another day, I could mention Stranger Than Fiction alongside masterpieces of mortality like The Green Knight, Puss in Boots: The Last Wish, and Logan, and perhaps on another day, I will. But not today. Today’s about hope and fresh starts. So I’d rather focus on his other main act of agency.
Harold buys a guitar. He’s always wanted to learn to play, but he never did. For whatever reason, life got in the way of that and he made it to middle age without ever getting to (I know the feeling, with my own midnight wine Stratocaster gathering dust in some forgotten corner). But first, he goes to a psychiatrist who tells him that he’s experiencing symptoms of schizophrenia and when he protests, she suggests he speaks to someone who knows about literature, if he is indeed in a book as he believes. Enter Professor Jules Hilbert, played by Dustin Hoffman (Rain Man, Kung Fu Panda 4), who devises a series of tests to find out what kind of story he’s in. When Jules comes to his conclusion, he tells Harold to just live his life. He is marching inextricably towards his own demise. He has no control over his life and he could die at any moment, so he should live life to the fullest. So Harold buys a guitar and decides to act on the feelings he’s been developing for Ana, whom Gyllenhaal plays with a great deal of charm. Ana plays Harold hot and cold, being mean to the auditor and making his life miserable, but also doing something nice for him to balance things out. Harold can’t help but fall for her and I get it. Not only is there a voice in his head telling him that he’s catching the terrible ailment called romantic desire, but Ana is beautiful, caring, gentle, free-spirited, and unlike anyone Harold has ever met. No wonder he’s intrigued.
I will say that the romantic plot line of the film is its weakest; 20 years ago, I thought it was very sweet, but now I do see it a little differently. I wouldn’t go so far as to call it problematic—we’re not talking Three Days of the Condor here, but it’s not the most artfully handled and I think we could have spent more time with the two of them as the different storylines progress and intertwine. It’s still a bit sweet, for sure, watching this repressed man try to reconcile his feelings for a free spirited woman who is nothing like him, and while Ana is far from a manic pixie dream girl, I do wish we got a little more meat to her character. She’s not just some object of desire, though, Ana does get to be her own character, but I would have liked a little more. Gyllenhaal is so good here, I can’t help but want more of her in this movie. And perhaps some less clumsy writing as Harold tries to express his feelings, but overall, it doesn’t detract too much from the film.
It’s that. Choosing to die may exercise his agency in the ultimate way, but choosing to live—to really live, to do more than just work and survive—is his most profound act of defiance, it is an unbelievably beautiful choice. So this is where Harold stands. Death imminent, but still unknown, deciding that he’ll no longer be a passenger in his own life, that love and passion are worth pursuing with the time he has left, and that maybe, just maybe, doing his work as an IRS auditor and counting how many times he brushes each tooth and tying his tie with a certain knot to save fractions of a second over a different knot, isn’t the be all, end all of human existence. That’s his fresh start. He’s freed from the rote mechanical existence he’d been living by knowing that he’s going to die.
But here’s the thing. We’re all going to die. And very few of us know when or how. So Harold isn’t just a reminder that we’re all going to die, he’s also a reminder that we need to remember to live along the way. It’s in these moments, as Harold lays eyes on the battered, used Fender Strat he eventually buys and realizes that taking a chance on love is better than quietly waiting for his time to run out, that I take great, great hope for tomorrow. Because we all can choose that. We all can choose to live right now. We can all buy a guitar or whatever our repressed passion may be, we can all take a chance on someone, we can all decide that whatever time we have is more precious than whatever we’re protecting by not doing the things we really want to do.
Stranger Than Fiction isn’t perfect, but it’s an absolutely beautiful, heartwarming film that I feel is overlooked, partly because of where it stands in Will Ferrell’s oeuvre. It’s his first dramatic role, but he’s funny, playing one of his more typical characters almost in reverse. It’s comedic, but it’s not a comedy. It’s romantic, but it’s not a romance. It’s ambitious and meta, but it’s not full of itself. Sure, it’s a little full of itself, but you want a little bit of that in writing; you have to believe you’re telling a story worth telling, otherwise you wouldn’t spend the time creating it or hope that others will spend the time experiencing it. The meta narrative about writing and literature particularly resonates with me as a writer myself, and every main character is named after some prominent philosopher, mathematician, or similar—Pascal, Eiffel, Crick, Escher. So yeah, it’s a little into itself. And while it has its flaws, there’s too much beauty in the way this story is told to ignore. Yes, Everything Must Go might be Ferrell’s dramatic centerpiece, but Stranger Than Fiction is what got him there and it’s the role that made me take him seriously as an actor, and not just an SNL player from an era I didn’t enjoy with one-trick movies that didn’t really appeal to me. The movie mirrors what Karen Eiffel wants out of her novel; a look at the interconnectivity of life, the seemingly unrelated things that butterfly effect us towards the little and big moments of our life, the importance of sharing our lives with others and enriching both our lives and theirs in the process. It’s a wonderful movie to start the new year with; a fresh start deserves a fresh perspective and if you haven’t seen Stranger Than Fiction before, maybe it’ll do for you what it did for me. Currently streaming on Peacock, it’s PG-13, which it really didn’t need to be, because I don’t think this subject matter will appeal much to younger audiences, and at 1 hour, 53 minutes, it doesn’t overstay its welcome.
And now I get to thank you all again for the time you’ve spent here. It’s a big internet out there, there are a lot of places and ways you can spend your time and I’m honored that you’ve decided to spend any amount of it here, reading my thoughts on movies and TV series, and letting me muse about how important media is. If you’re going out to celebrate the end of a year and the start of a new one, please be safe and celebrate responsibly. If you’re staying in, you’ve probably got a better head on your shoulders than I do. I wish you all a happy and healthy 2026 and may we all take Harold’s example and choose to live rather than just exist.
Also, sorry for referencing Tuesdays with Morrie in a blog title again. It just fit too well. Happy New Year!