Search - Smart People on DVD


Smart People
Smart People
Actor: Sarah Jessica Parker
Genres: Indie & Art House, Comedy, Drama
R     2008     1hr 35min

Driven by a clever script and fine performances, SMART PEOPLE is set in the land of academia, a place where both Lawrence and Vanessa have taken refuge and plunged themselves into as escape from the external world. In spit...  more »
     
     

Larger Image

Movie Details

Actor: Sarah Jessica Parker
Genres: Indie & Art House, Comedy, Drama
Sub-Genres: Indie & Art House, Comedy, Drama
Studio: Miramax
Format: DVD - Color,Widescreen - Subtitled
DVD Release Date: 08/12/2008
Original Release Date: 01/01/2008
Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/2008
Release Year: 2008
Run Time: 1hr 35min
Screens: Color,Widescreen
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 9
Members Wishing: 0
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Languages: English
Subtitles: French, Spanish
See Also:

Similar Movies

The Tracey Fragments
Director: Bruce McDonald
   R   2008   1hr 17min
An American Crime
Director: Tommy O'Haver
   R   2008   1hr 32min
Mouth to Mouth
5
   UR   2007   1hr 41min
Juno
Mcsh Ws Dub Sub Ac3 Dol
   PG-13   2009
Hard Candy
Director: David Slade
   R   2006   1hr 44min
   
Peacock
   PG-13   2010   1hr 30min
Super
Director: James Gunn
   R   2011   1hr 38min

Similarly Requested DVDs

Then She Found Me
Director: Helen Hunt
   R   2008   1hr 40min
   
Burn After Reading
Directors: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
   R   2008   1hr 36min
   
Meet Bill
Directors: Bernie Goldmann, Melissa Wallack
   R   2008   1hr 35min
   
Sleepwalking
Director: William Maher
   R   2008   1hr 41min
   
Up in the Air
Director: Jason Reitman
   R   2010   1hr 49min
   
The Life Before Her Eyes
Director: Vadim Perelman
   R   2008   1hr 30min
   
Seven Pounds
Director: Gabriele Muccino
   PG-13   2009   2hr 3min
   
The Savages
   R   2008   1hr 53min
   
Ghost Town
Director: David Koepp
   PG-13   2008   1hr 42min
   
Feast of Love
   R   2008   1hr 41min
   
 

Member Movie Reviews

K. K. (GAMER)
Reviewed on 8/16/2024...
Big fan of Dennis Quaid but some really dragging moments. There were some high points and you enjoy these moments but getting there was painful and this is not a rewatch and definitely not a keeper! Quaid plays a much different role than his normal energetic role.
Kelly N. from KALISPELL, MT
Reviewed on 10/15/2018...
Dennis Quaid plays a widowed professor with a "loser" brother -- Thomas Haden Church -- who ends up being the wisest of them all in terms of relationships and what makes a happy life. Ellen Page is the over-achieving high school daughter who is stunted in her maturity due to her self-absorbed father and her eagerness to please. Quaint and entertaining!
0 of 1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Leah G. (Leahbelle) from NIPOMO, CA
Reviewed on 6/23/2013...
This was not a usual role for Dennis Quaid and he played it magnificently. So did everyone else. I can see why this was an Official Selection for the Sundance Film Festival. The characters are wonderful -- educated -- smart -- and totally lacking in emotional common sense. I loved every minute of it.
0 of 1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Matthew M. from WAILUKU, HI
Reviewed on 2/1/2010...
A very good movie. It was clever and wity yet poignent and pertinent.
1 of 4 member(s) found this review helpful.

Movie Reviews

Smart people don't always make the best choices--or understa
R. Kyle | USA | 04/16/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Dr. Lawrence Wetherhold's (Quaid) got an impulse problem. When his car's impounded at Carnegie Mellon, where he teaches Lit, he climbs over the fence to get his briefcase. The resulting brouhaha gets his license suspended for the next six months. He does meet Dr. Janet Hartigan (Parker) whose life was changed by taking Wetherhold's class many years ago--major shifted from English to Medicine.

Enter Chuck (Haden-Church) his adopted brother. Being between very odd jobs, Chuck is the only family member with time to squire Lawrence around.

Lawrence's daughter Vanessa (Page) is studying like mad to get into Stanford with a perfect SAT. Between cramming sessions, she hides romance books from her Dad, who'd probably die of horror if he knew she read them.

James (Holmes) the elder son is already in school and unbeknownst to his Dad, is a poet. His poem got accepted by "The New Yorker" before Lawrence even found out.

Lawrence is interested in the doc, but he can't quite get over the loss a couple of years past, of his wife. Her clothes still fill his closet and clearly her memory still haunts him. Chuck and Vanessa try to work on cleaning up Lawrence's life while nearly messing up their own.

Slowly, the characters in the film begin to deal with their own griefs, mistakes, and begin to come to grips with themselves and each other. They're not the most likable or the best fit, but what family is? They're definitely interesting--and you do see character development in the major players.

"
But, how do you know what tone I was trying to set?
C. CRADDOCK | Bakersfield | 02/22/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Smart People is a great dramedy--a mixture of comedy and drama. It goes for the Smart Laugh, not the Big Laugh. Mark Poirier, the son of a MIT professor, wrote a Smart script, and Smart Director Noam Murro very smartly cast some of the smartest actors around: Ellen Page, Thomas Haden Church, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Dennis Quaid. I loved it, because I am also very Smart, but it didn't do as well at the box office or with the critics (except it was the Number One DVD at Netflix for a while) as it deserved. That Smarts.

I think the problem with this movie is that like the characters, Lawrence Wetherhold (Dennis Quaid) and his daughter Vanessa Wetherhold (Ellen Page), it doesn't suffer fools gladly. Thus, for a large portion of the audience, it is over their heads, and they feel like it is condescending, supercilious, and they feel patronized. As Lawrence's adopted brother, Chuck Wetherhold (Thomas Haden Church) says of Vanessa: "You're a monster!"

And that is an understatement. In another scene she says to her father, "Theresa Sternbridge practically runs a soup kitchen and she's always seen posing in photos with crack babies and dying, old, crusty ladies. And do you know why? She scored in the 45th percentile on her SAT. People like you and me don't need to compensate."

Although Chuck sees that Vanessa, and her role model father, are both monsters, in spite or because of their intelligence, he still loves them and tries to help. Did I mention that Chuck is a screw up, down on his luck, and an opportunist who sees a win/win situation for himself when his brother has a seizure and cannot drive. He will have a place to stay, and 3 squares, for driving his brother around--albeit very unreliably.

Though he is not the greatest driver, he really has a lot of intelligence about people. For instance, at a Christmas Dinner, where Vanessa's brother James Wetherhold (Ashton Holmes) complains about the rubbery ham (Vanessa used a recipe downloaded from the Internet written in the archaic French of Louis the XIV, and translated by her, maybe not as well as she thinks (a great example of her over achiever approach to cooking); when former student and now doctor Janet Hartigan (Sarah Jessica Parker) drops in unexpectedly Chuck explains "These children haven't been properly parented in many years. They're practically feral. That's why I was brought in. To keep them from killing each other."

All of the characters have a story arc, where they have an epiphany, and reach a greater awareness; but the Father/Daughter dynamic between the professor and his precocious progeny is perhaps the most complicated. He takes her for granted and is even less involved with his son James, while she idolizes him and emulates his self absorbed and condescending approach to other, less worthy, people.

---------------------
Lawrence Wetherhold: I don't think you're very happy Vanessa.
Vanessa Wetherhold: Well, you're not happy. And you're my role model.
=============================

She tries to sabotage his relationship with Janet, but he is more than capable of sabotaging it all by himself. However, with a little help and coaching from brother Chuck, perhaps he will prevail after all.

By the way, fabulous performance by Thomas Haden Church, comparable to his character and performance in Sideways. Chuck was one of my favorite characters.

That Ellen Page really nailed her role goes without saying. Her only danger now is being forever typecast as the wise-beyond-her-years waif. What other young actress could convincingly play someone stressed out about getting a perfect SAT score?

Sarah Jessica Parker was smart and sassy, yet she was also a bit damaged, and had a lesson to learn. Great scene when Janet first meets Chuck.

Dennis Quaid wore a fat suit and had a shuffling walk, like he had something stuffed up inside him. He looked very different than previous roles, and created a quite convincing persona. He really conveyed his utter disregard for those below him on the bell curve of intelligence. He was very annoying, as his role called for that, but gradually, perhaps, he would come around. One sub plot was about him getting a book published, and as you could imagine by the dry academic title, there was little chance of that happening. But when he submitted it under a title suggested by his daughter Vanessa, YOU CAN'T READ!, it finally was accepted.

---------------
Bloomberg: I got to the third section where I noticed a certain marketable tone, the surly smarter-than-thou @$$#0[3 tone.
===================================

Their strategy was that it would be attacked on NPR and three weeks later he'd be interviewed defending it on Charlie Rose. Kind of like when you have a lemon, make lemonade.

Last but not least, Ashton Holmes as James Wetherhold and Camille Mana as Missy Chin, one of Lawrence's students, were both good in their small but pivotal roles. James had good reason to stay away from the toxic environment he called home as much as possible, but when he was there, he made a quiet impact.

This was the first big screen role for Camille Mana, but I recognized her from the UPN sitcom One on One where she played Lisa Sanchez. She is very smart, having graduated from UC Berkeley with a degree in economics after only 6 semesters, and I predict great things for her.

In Smart People she keeps popping up as the thorn in her professor's side, and if he wasn't so self absorbed, perhaps he would remember her name. She and James even hook up, and you almost wish the focus had been on them a bit more. However, they function as a reminder that other people have lives just as interesting if not more so than the self absorbed professor and his equally self absorbed daughter. When James gets a poem published in The New Yorker, Lawrence is surprised to learn that he writes poetry. Perhaps he should listen to what other people have to say once in a while.

I really liked this film because I could relate to the Smart People, and how hard it is for them to be humble. Yes, I too have a reputation for not suffering fools gladly, but after years of isolation, I would suffer them more than gladly. Though I may have an extremely high IQ, there are many different kinds of intelligence, and I wish that I had a little more intelligence about people. Perhaps I can get a high score on an intelligence test, but sometimes I can be a complete idiot.

OTHER NOTABLE ROLES OF SMART PEOPLE CAST MEMBERS

Sex and the City - The Movie (Special Edition) (2008) .... Sarah Jessica Parker was Carrie Bradshaw
Juno (Single-Disc Edition) (2007) .... Ellen Page was Juno MacGuff
Spider-Man 3 (2007) .... Thomas Haden Church was Sandman / Flint Marko
An American Crime (2007) .... Ellen Page was Sylvia Likens
What We Do Is Secret (2007) .... Ashton Holmes was Rob Henley
Normal Adolescent Behavior: Havoc 2 (2007) .... Ashton Holmes was Sean
Hard Candy (2005) .... Ellen Page was Hayley Stark
A History of Violence (2005) .... Ashton Holmes was Jack Stall
Sideways (Widescreen Edition) (2004) .... Thomas Haden Church was Jack
Spanglish (2004) .... Thomas Haden Church was Mike the Realtor
Far From Heaven (2002) .... Dennis Quaid was Frank Whitaker
Postcards from the Edge (1990) .... Dennis Quaid was Jack Faulkner
Great Balls of Fire! (1989) .... Dennis Quaid was Jerry Lee Lewis
Girls Just Want to Have Fun (1985) .... Sarah Jessica Parker was Janey Glenn
Footloose (1984) .... Sarah Jessica Parker was Rusty

----------------------
Vanessa Wetherhold: You should really make your bed. It sets the tone for the day.
Chuck Wetherhold: But, how do you know what tone I was trying to set?
========================================="
This one falls short, but it was still ok.
Peter Shermeta | Rochester, MI | 03/10/2009
(3 out of 5 stars)

"A self-absorbed college professor lost sight of the need to be sensitive of other people and their feelings when his wife died. Raising his daughter on his own has been difficult, but she's growing up just like her dad. And no, that is not a good thing. (He has a son, too, but he seems at least relatively well adjusted. So this movie is not about him.) The professor's dead-beat brother moves in with them and tries to give perspective to both the professor and his daughter.

Apparently there is a new formula in small-budget, independent comedies. What do you add to a pretentious lead character to create comedy? Thomas Hayden Church. It worked in Sideways, and it worked again here. He is the down-on-his-luck brother who weasles his way in to free room and board. While staying with his brother and niece he shakes them out of old habits and tries to implore them to take control and live their lives free from societal pressures to be something they do not want to be. Sounds heavy, but it wasn't that bad.

This was Ellen Page's big follow-up to Juno. I don't think this was what people were hoping for. As the professor's daughter she brought all of the attitude of Juno with none of the charm.

Dennis Quaid is our nutty professor, our single father. I like Mr. Quaid. I think that his often-exasperated mannerisms are enjoyable, almost Jack Nicholson-esque at times. I find comfort in his schtick, I guess. He was sometimes frustrating, but otherwise good yet again.

Smart People could have been called "Boring People and the Brother," but that is probably less marketable. This is an okay movie with a good cast. And the overall feel of the movie was saved by Thomas Hayden Church. I don't want to give him a reputation he cannot live up to, but the small resurgence in his career has been worthwhile for me.
"