Smart People Review
by Anthony Morris
There's a certain
kind of unease you get from watching a movie where the characters are
meant to be really smart but everything they say or do is kind of
dumb.
Usually it's in bad murder mysteries involving so-called "criminal geniuses" (like every movie in the Saw
series), where everyone stands around talking about how amazingly
brilliant the masterminds' schemes are while any half-awake member of
the audience figured out what was going on a good half hour ago.
But Smart People
has an even bigger problem, in that it doesn't have any gratuitous
killings to distract viewers from the fact that English lit Professor
Wetherhold (Dennis Quaid) is actually pretty dumb. Not because he's
still moping around after his dead wife, or that when he does finally
strike up a relationship of sorts with his doctor (Sarah Jessica
Parker, who we're expected to believe is under 40 here) his pompous
windbaggery is enough to drive her away, and she's clearly dim even for
a doctor.
Not even because he lets his supposedly dimmer
but clearly more on the ball brother (the always fun Thomas Hadyen
Church, who's increasingly the Bill Murray you get when you can't
afford Bill Murray) move in with his obviously dysfunctional family,
including his super-smart Republican robot in the making daughter
(Ellen Page).
But because in-between doing all that he
never gets the chance to actually seem smart. The joke is clearly meant
to be that all these "smart" people are really dumb when it comes to
running their lives but, well, they're just all-round dumb no matter
how many references they make to great literature or high brow
culture.
Which makes this would-be smart indy film (which, to be fair, does feature a lot of good performances) pretty dumb too. 3 out
of 5 Smart People Australian release: 24th April, 2008 Cast: Dennis Quaid, Sarah Jessica Parker, Thomas Haden Church, Ellen Page Director: Noam Murro
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