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IMDb user comments for
Smart People (2008)

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50 out of 90 people found the following comment useful :-
More complex and interesting than JUNO but just as good, 19 March 2008
10/10
Author: mrjoelcairo from San Diego, CA

I saw this at Sundance. It was even better than expected, and I had my hopes up going into it. The story is smart, funny and more complex than Juno. Don't get me wrong; I loved Juno. I guess I am saying that Smart People is on a parallel level of quality with it despite being more complex in terms of the characters and their relationships. If you loved Juno, think of Smart People as your next stepping stone upward. While Ellen Page is one of the stars here, it is important not to overlook the fact that two of the bona fide actors with solid track records -- Dennis Quaid and Thomas Haden Church -- are really the main attractions here. If you look at Quaid's film history, you will see a wide array of projects, ranging from Breaking Away and The Right Stuff to Far From Heaven and Traffic. He's not afraid to take risks as an actor, and his long career shows that he is able to withstand the ebbs and flows of an industry that is very fickle. He's the reason you should see this film.

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12 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :-
Familiar, but well done dramedy featuring some stellar performances, 13 April 2008
8/10
Author: zetes from Saint Paul, MN

An indie comedy about a quirky family of self-hating misfits. We've seen this before, am I right? Well, so what, I say. When it's done well, I don't care too much whether the concept has been done before. And Smart People is done quite well. Dennis Quaid stars as a college professor and widower who hasn't been out with a woman since his wife died an unspecified (but long) amount of time ago. He lives alone with his daughter (Ellen Page). He has a son who goes to the same college at which he teaches and an adopted brother (Thomas Haden Church) who likes to mooch off of him. After an accident, Church moves in with Quaid and Page. Quaid also meets a former student (Sarah Jessica Parker), now a doctor, who had a crush on him. They start to date. The plot isn't anything special, but the dialogue is witty and the relationships are well observed. And this is also a case of fine actors who make something merely serviceable into something special. Quaid has never been better. My feeling about his work as an actor is that he is very uneven. He can be excellent, such as in The Right Stuff, but usually he's adequate, and often, perhaps too often, he's awful. But this is definitely one of the excellent performances. Church has kind of a sitcommy role, but that's fitting for an actor who was really good in sitcoms. He's hilarious here, too. A lot of the time, I was thinking of the movie as somewhat akin to a sitcom, but a good sitcom. There have been such things, you know. Page, fresh off her star-making turn as Juno (though Smart People was filmed earlier), is an actress I've liked in a couple of movies I disliked (Juno and Hard Candy). Finally, a movie with her that I actually like! Feels good. And she's great in it. The character is similar to Juno, but not quite so despicably precious. I like how the writer and director invite the audience to dislike all four of the major characters, at least a bit. They are recognizable people, which is, unfortunately, a rarity in movies. I liked the movie, and recommend it.

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8 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
It was a gamble, but good film!, 11 April 2008
7/10
Author: joestank15 from United States

Smart People - Smart People had a 46% on Rotten Tomatoes, but it's far better than that. Lawrence Wetherhold (Dennie Quaid) is a "holier than thou" widowed professor you unfortunately meet once in awhile. He's the sort who's deeply invested in his subject but can neither make it accessible nor allow the students any time to discuss it. He's a brilliant asshole essentially. He meets a physician in a hospital after a head injury and begins to reevaluate his life and his happiness. He has a dead-beat brother-in-law (Thomas Haden Church who steals every scene he's in), a daughter (Ellen Page) who is a young Ann Coulter in the making, and a son (Ashton Holmes) to whom he never talks.

This film is quite funny! Page and Church were definitely the stand-outs, but I appreciated Dennis Quaid and Sarah Jessica Parker, two actors who I rarely ever have liked. It deals with a couple familiar rom-com problems (pregnancy, the "other woman" thing), but the film never feels overly sentimental or cliché. It's satisfying watching Quaid's character get some richly deserved socks to the stomach once in awhile, but you're with him anyway by the end. The humor is a little on the biting cold side, which goes well with my tastes, maybe not with some. Smart People overstays it's welcome a bit near the end, but a good movie overall.

B.

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5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-
Good, but don't go in expecting a comedy, 24 April 2008
7/10
Author: Kristine (kristinedrama14@msn.com) from Chicago, Illinois

When I saw "Smart People" the trailer, I have to say that the first thought that came into my mind is "Sideways: Part 2". It had the same formula and characters. But I really wasn't as into Sideways as everyone else was, so I wasn't so excited to see this movie. But today I just decided to go ahead and give it a chance, I'm more grown up since I've seen Sideways, so why not just see what the film had to offer? I have to say while the movie does not excite me, I also see it doesn't excite too many people here on IMDb, it's a decent enough movie and worth the watch. The solid performances make the film likable and the story is interesting to watch, while it's not something that everyone can relate too, it's a good movie.

Lawerance is a college professor who isn't the most popular guy on campus, he's pompous, arrogant, and puts himself higher above his students while ignoring their plea's for extra help on assignments. His son hates him, his daughter admires him and is quite the over achiever, and his adopted brother is a scam artist. But when Lawerance has an accident while jumping fence, he hits his head, and meets former student, Janet Hartigan. They start to date, his daughter, Vanessa, goes through her life realizing she's never really had fun, and his adopted brother, Chuck needs this family just as much as Lawerance needs it.

Smart People, the major problem is that this was advertised as a comedy, it has some funny moments, but they're not what you would call laugh out loud. I'd say this is more of a drama with comedic elements, kind of like "Dan in Real Life", so Smart People didn't have "Smart Advertisement", but the movie is worth the watch. I would recommend it, it's an interesting film, not thrilling, so I would recommend probably waiting for the rental. But the cast pulls the movie together and makes it into a good drama.

7/10

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12 out of 19 people found the following comment useful :-
It's OK, 12 April 2008
5/10
Author: foofalow

This film isn't the laugh riot that the trailers made it out to be… with that said, that is the reason I gave this film a low score. If you are looking for comedy, only a few scenes deserve a chuckle. I would have still gone to this movie if they edited a truthful preview.

THC is always awesome and with out his portrayal of the uncle I think this film would have really bombed with out him. I was slight disappointed in EP but she was probably fresh off her Juno movie (awesome BTW) which is probably why I felt she had a little bit of her Juno character in there.

It was an OK slice of life film with pompous characters that everyone has encountered at some point in their lives. Well, I went in expecting a comedy but got a decent downer movie.

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2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-
unripe and reminiscent of the excellent 'The Accidental Tourist', 28 April 2008
6/10
Author: cohnmartin from United States

I've just seen this film and read a number of reviews about it. Many reviewers are referencing 'Little Miss Sunshine', 'The Family Stone', etc. But I left the theatre thinking of the wonderful, beautifully balanced and developed, fun film, 'The Accidental Tourist'--another film about an emotionally deadened, difficult man who is suffering from the loss of a loved one and is 'redeemed' through love. Talk about quirky families; the one in 'Tourist' puts most of the rest to shame. The difference perhaps in the quality of these films (Tourist very high, Smart People quite low, many others in the 'genre' somewhere inbetween) lies in that The Accidental Tourist was based on the highly crafted, moving novel of the same title by the gifted writer Anne Tyler. What stands out for me again and again as I work up my courage to attend recent releases is that the quality of screenplay writing in Hollywood and elsewhere is low, low, low. Rushed, pressured, unbaked--too many films being made too fast, with scripts that bore and confuse us with unconvincing plots and thin characters. This film, Smart People, could have been--with revision and review--a much better, more engaging, moving picture. The script simply wasn't ready for production; the story isn't there.

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1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-
An all right film, yet nothing special. Still it's witty and it proves you learn life as you go., 28 April 2008
7/10
Author: Danny Blankenship from Petersburg, Virginia

"Smart People" isn't a laugh clinic it's more of a film that's written very sharp and the lines are witty and intelligent. And the themes of characterization dominate much of the movie as each face a problem during their life. And this film really shows and proves that each and every person no matter how smart or dumb they are learn something as they go. The cast is super with veterans Quaid, Parker, and Church who give steady and seasoned performances and it blends well with Page's witty and fresh intelligent turn.

Dennis Quaid is Lawrence Wetherhold a literature professor at a Pittsburgh, PA university who's a cultured yet uptight and lonely social misfit who still misses his deceased wife. One of the things that keeps him going is his witty and smart as could be daughter Vanessa(Ellen Page) who knows everything from politics to pop culture she also has a sharp tongue she's certainly a joy to listen to(much like Page's "Juno" character). Also he's just taken in his lonely and confused stepbrother Chuck(Thomas Haden Church)who does provide him some emotional support. Much of that changes for the better thru bad fate after Lawrence suffers a concussion and once he discovers after his treatment from ER doctor Janet(Sarah Jessica Parker)that she was once an ex student a friendship develops into love.

Along the way the film focuses in on each characters good points and their negatives as each learn the good and bad points along the way about one another. Ending in a surprise as this films proves no matter how intelligent or smart a person is they can always learn from life's lessons and by making mistakes unexpected joys and happiness may arrive. You learn life as you go. This film is nothing great, but okay for the way it's witty and focuses on different characterizations and it proves each must learn and the performances are well from the veterans topped off by Page's wit.

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1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-
Less is more, 27 April 2008
7/10
Author: wjellick from United States

Not for your average movie-goer, this one. Although the situation is teed up nicely for a typical feel-good ensemble gush-fest, it resists that temptation and takes you to a place where the characters are not, although they seem to need it, ready for rehab. It has an easy, rambling style that gradually rather than gratuitously opens their world to us without (for the most part) overly relying on hackneyed situations and gimmicks (although Quaid's insistence on keeping his wifes clothing was not one of them). In fact, the situations portrayed are so dark and lo- keyed that I wondered if this movie could have been made without the ready-made typecast qualities of Quaid, Haden-Church and Parker. ...Gritty Pittsburgh backdrop in a very real academic surrounding adds to the slice-of-life tone.

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1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-
A family stuck in limbo after a wife/mother's death learns to live and love again, 25 April 2008
8/10
Author: remydiva from Canada

I loved "Juno" because of the clever dialogue thanks to Diablo Cody's writing.Ellen Page was definitely the star of 'Juno' with the other actors merely acting as straight men to her lines.

'Smart People' was also clever but for exactly the opposite reasons. Dennis Quaid looked and acted precisely like the crusty English prof he was meant to be; Ellen Page was the nerdy daughter who ferociously protected her widowed father while attempting to fill her mother's shoes in running the household, at the expense of her own happiness; and Thomas Haden Church was an unexpected star. He had snappy lines and ended up being the glue that held a hurting family together. The family was like a four legged table that was suddenly missing a leg...Church's character, the adopted wayward brother of Quaid, served as a sounding board and liaison that worked to bring them all together.

The story line was thin and a throwaway but I didn't want the movie to end because I cared about the characters and wanted to see how they turned out in the end. I wanted them and needed them to be alright.

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1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-
An Ordinary Film Thats Anthing But Ordinary, 20 April 2008
9/10
Author: (Mlewis-53) from United States

Smart People and Juno are alike in only in one way. They are both really good movies. The entire cast give great performances and this film has plenty of laughs. Thomas Haden Church and Ellen Page give sensational performances and have yet to disappoint me. The screenplay by Mark Poirier is very well written and deserves some attention that he will most likely not get. The film is very directed by newcomer Noam Nurro and any film he does its in good hands. Yeah I know thats there's a lot of films that are about ordinary people but its a plot thats never get old and always have great performances and laughs every time especially Smart People. Despite this film getting not that much praise, its a great film to see if you like those ordinary films that anything but ordinary.

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