Smart People | Dennis Quaid, Sarah Jessica Parker | Smart Dysfunctional People
DVDs:
Smart People
Smart People
Dennis Quaid
,
Sarah Jessica Parker
Miramax, 2008
average customer review:
based on 50 reviews
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From the producer of SIDEWAYS -- get to know a lovable yet dysfunctional family everyone can relate to in this lighthearted comedy
PEOPLE
(Leah Rozen) calls "
smart
and enjoyable." When Lawrence Wetherhold (Dennis Quaid) -- a widowed and self-absorbed professor -- falls for his attractive former student (Sex And The City's Sarah Jessica Parker) his all-too-predictable life suddenly turns sunny side up. That is until his freeloading brother (Thomas Haden Church) and his sharp-tongued overachieving daughter (Juno's Ellen Page)speak up making "chaos" the word of the day. Now on DVD SMART PEOPLE is even funnier with never-before-seen interviews deleted scenes and hilarious outtakes.System Requirements:Running Time: 95 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: COMEDY/BUDDY FILMS Rating: R UPC: 786936755916 Manufacturer No: 5650603
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Smart people aren't always
Dennis Quaid plays an English professor so pompous and self-contained that the unpleasant odor of mothballs must emanate off that tweed jacket he wears. Stuck. Stuck in a past when his wife died and he became a widower. Stuck in a career where he allows no growth for himself.
Smart
people
.
His daughter, a pompous and bombastic smart person, is a brainiac headed to Stanford. Her uncle pretty much defines her as a robotic android. The uncle and adopted brother comes into the story early on. A n'e'r-do-well who enjoys muddling through life, he, too, is one of the "smart people." He uses his intelligence to become the an unintentional nudge for change for the daughter.
Then there's the son, now a student at the same college where his dad doggedly teaches. Dr. Wetherhold most likely uses the same notes prepared the first time he delivered the lecture. Words just billow from him like smoke and not living things to be savored with others--his students. He holds their essays in as much disdain. During the course of the story he positions himself to be named the head of the English department.
The pivotal point of the story is the doctor who treats Lawrence in the emergency room and grounds him from driving for six months (actually in retaliation for a C he assigned one of her essays written ten years earlier when she was his student and originally an English major.)
They go out to eat. After he delivers a 45-minute soliloquy about Victorian literature, she interrupts to tell him what a stuffed windbag he is and leaves.
All these people live in a grim reality of unrequited happiness, acceptance of the status quo, and inertia to change anything. Little by little, life intercedes. There's a miracle that changes everything.
"Smart People" is about smart people, but not as a positive attribute. To take pride in being smart and not extending beyond oneself is the height of selfishness. Some thinkers would say this is good, but the characters in this story don't even know they are lost in a maze of the thick muck of conceit and the supercilious. However, when two smart people collide and a tiny spark flickers, anything can happen.
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Smart Dysfunctional People
I think '
Smart
People
' is an acquired taste, but it's a movie that I definitely enjoyed. A cross between 'Little Miss Sunshine' and 'As Good As It Gets, 'Smart People' is witty, sarcastically humorous and intelligent.
The characters are quirky and awkward; each of their personalities is taken to such an extreme that it becomes comical. Great acting overall; Ellen Page is brilliant in the role of Vanessa, an over-achieving, anti-social teenager. I was slightly disappointed with Sarah Jessica Parker, as her mannerisms were too reminiscent of 'Sex and the City', especially during the bedroom scene.
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Its okay.
A lot of talent and dennis quaid made a movie. And, its okay. Its not bad. Its not great. Its good, no serious holes or terrible plot, just a movie.
Smart People - Blu-ray Info
Version: U.S.A / Region-A
Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
MPEG-4 AVC BD-50 / High Profile 4.1
Running time: 1:34:51
Movie size: 24,03 GB
Disc size: 27,92 GB
Average video bit rate: 24.05 Mbps
Number of chapters: 16
LPCM Audio English 6912 kbps 5.1 / 48kHz / 24-bit / 6912kbps
Dolby Digital Audio English 640 kbps 5.1 / 48kHz / 640kbps
Dolby Digital Audio English 192 kbps 2.0 / 48kHz / 192kbps
Subtitles; English SDH / French / Spanish
#Audio commentary
#9 deleted scenes
#Bonus trailers
#Featurette
-The
Smart
est
People
-Not So Smart outtakes
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"We Could Use Some Antivenin in Here" ...
The Wetherhold family is still reeling from the death of its matriarch. The environment is simply toxic. Professor Wetherhold clings to his departed wife's clothes. And, his teenage daughter uncannily slides into Mom's role: making dinners with internet recipes, tending to the laundry, and conducting various other hausfrau duties. When Uncle Lawrence arrives to help/mooch, the hilarity (almost but not really) begins.
As is customary with indie films, there is nothing tidy about this work. Most of the characters are deliberately detestable: Professor Wetherhold (Quaid) is a self-absorbed misanthrope, his teenage daughter (Page) may as well be his doppelganger, and love-interest Dr. Hartigan (Parker) is excruciatingly insular (and still obsessed with a "C" paper she received in the professor's Victorian Literature course). While well-played, this dynamic becomes deadly ... the film just stagnates.
Now, the one redeeming feature of this work is Thomas Haden Church's portrayal of Uncle Lawrence. Though nothing could possibly make this film truly great, Church makes it bearable. (And I thought I'd hate him for eternity after his despicable role in Sideways!) With stark honesty, Church revives our memories of "that uncle" ... the one with all the "get rich quick" ideas, the one needing a place to crash, the one who bought you beer when you were sixteen ... yeah, that guy. And, instead of playing a buffoon, Church brings the role depth. There is something vulnerable in his character. For all his flaws, he is by far the most human ... and it is he who begins to heal the "brilliant family." (Ironic, I suppose).
Much like doctors who detest ER, I found myself made uncomfortable by the depiction of academia (which constitutes the bulk of the film). Yes, it really is all politics ... yes, jargon-laden garbage really does translate to serious promotions ... but the whining students were just painful. I guess every seat-filler thinks he/she is memorable ... I can assure you, most aren't. Why should Professor Wetherhold feel guilty for not remembering inconsequential
people
? Why should he regret making less-than-glowing comments on student-papers? It's his job. I guess I'm just too close to the subject to be objective, but it seems some overly sensitive English major (who once-upon-a-time received a "hard-breaking" "C") wrote this script.
Be prepared for a slow-paced film with some flashes of genuine comedy ... but nothing that will alter your life ... nothing you will even care to discuss (in the faculty lounge) on Monday morning.
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