- Studio: Miramax Films
- Release Date: Apr 11, 2008
User Score
7.4
out of 10
Generally favorable reviews- based on 72 Ratings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 53 out of 72
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Mixed: 9 out of 72
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Negative: 10 out of 72
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ScottMApr 13, 20082
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muriely.Apr 30, 20084
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martinlAug 25, 20082
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TonyB.Dec 19, 20084Ellen Page and Thomas Haden Church are the only reasons to see this one. Sara Jessica Parker is adequate in a poorly written role, but Dennis Quaid is not even that.
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ElizabethH.Apr 26, 20082worst movie i have seen all year. felt like amateur hour...didn't make much sense...a very odd movie. Dennis Quaid, one of my favorite actors, was the oddest. Was he drunk?
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FrankTheBunnyApr 29, 20083
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DavidGMay 26, 20084Good acting, but a horrible plot. The characters make no sense, and it seems like all of the character development happens offscreen..
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jefframoneMay 7, 20082
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JeffC.Aug 12, 20081The WORST rental I have endured in a while.... Embarrassing for everyone involved. I had high hopes coming from the SIDEWAYS crew... but this was a stinker. A series of "we have to talk" moments stuck together with a soundtrack that tried to bring some kind of drama that the script couldn't. Character driven? .... into the ditch.
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TrevorAug 30, 20083Really disappointed me. The premise has great potential, but the characters are mostly unlikeable. There is no chemistry between the leads, and Dennis Quaid comes off more like a semi-retarded, old pervert than a misunderstood, grumpy genius. Several plot devices are very cliched, and the ending is pretty much as cheesy as you can get.
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SamS.Nov 12, 20081The only thing more pathetic than knowing this movie is the sad and boring autobiography of the playwright, Mark Poirier, is the attempt of Dennis Quaid to conceal the fact that he's not 'acting' but is, in reality, that pathetic.
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MarkMay 12, 20093Interesting story that was poorly written. Cliche and attempted to be deep -- weak.
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70Poirer and director Noam Murro have trouble bringing this to a satisfying climax, but the characters are credible and sharply observed and all four actors go to town.
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75Page and Church work so brilliantly together as a comic team that it's worth enduring the leads' utter lack of chemistry together - not to mention the fact they're both wildly miscast.
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67A third of the way through Smart People, I channeled Randy Newman's "Short People" and thought, "Smart people got no reason to live."