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About Schmidt
on DVD (2002)
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| Starring: |
Jack Nicholson, Hope Davis, Dermot Mulroney, Kathy Bates, June Squibb, Howard Hesseman |
| Director: |
Alexander Payne |
| Studio: |
ENTERTAINMENT IN VIDEO |
| Run time: |
120 mins |
| Certificate: |
 |
| User collections: |
My top films, The Underated Understated, The Best of Black Comedy and Satire, Films and games that idiots love, Qwerky Classics, Some of the best films of 2002, the worst films ever!, You just can't beat these..., REAL films, I love these films but hey everyone has different taste |
| Genres: |
Drama |
| Languages: |
English |
| Subtitles: |
English |
| Released: |
23/06/2003
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Brief synopsis of About Schmidt
In Alexander Payne's ABOUT SCHMIDT, Warren Schmidt (Jack Nicholson) is retiring from a long, dedicated tenure at Woodmen of the World Insurance Company. Though he is proud of this achievement, he finds some difficulty adjusting to life without work; and to make matters worse, his loving wife Helen (June Squibb) passes away, leaving him all alone. Schmidt turns to his daughter Jeannie (Hope Davis) for support, but she is busy planning her marriage to Randall (Dermot Mulroney), who Warren just can't stand. He decides to sponsor a Tanzanian child, Ndugu, through a program advertised on television, and sends elaborate letters to the 6-year-old boy along with his $22 monthly checks. Meanwhile, he sets off on a soul-searching voyage across the west in his new RV. Nicholson's deadpan voice-over narration, especially in his letters to Ndugu, give ABOUT SCHMIDT a solid balance between comedy and drama. The crux of the film is the daughter's wedding in Denver, where Warren is the guest of Randall's outrageous, new-agey mom (Kathy Bates). Though the funny moments make light of Warren's state in life, the overall feel of the film is a bit sad, and its enigmatic ending will keep viewers guessing what will happen to this uniquely knowable character.
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Related
Critics Reviews
Radio Times
We've seen Jack Nicholson build a career on playing lunatics, misfits and colourful characters, but rarely has he had the opportunity to portray someone as unexceptional as Warren Schmidt — and he does an exceptionally good job. In this endearing tragi-comedy from director Alexander Payne, Nicholson plays a man who feels disconnected from his own life, a mood brought on by forced retirement, the sudden death of his wife and his daughter's impending marriage to a man he regards as a loser. His road trip to her wedding is the start of a very offbeat journey for the lonely, alienated Schmidt, as a subdued, almost glum Nicholson gets to grips with new beginnings. It's funnier than it sounds as the film's quirky approach to this late-life crisis is typified by Schmidt's hilarious outpouring of pent-up bitterness in his letters to a Tanzanian orphan that he has sponsored. While this is not a movie of great dramatic or comic peaks, the star's restrained, poignant performance nevertheless extracts meaning from the smallest moments.
Halliwell's Film Guide
At once affecting and funny, slyly observant and celebratory, this dark, comic look at old age gains immeasurably from Nicholson's contained performance; he restrains his usual mannerisms to suggest the confusions and decencies of a man who has lost his
Time Out
After retirement and his wife's sudden death, insurance salesman Warren Schmidt (Nicholson) feels his life, and all the...
Read more on www.timeout.com
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