Metacritic Film

Rocket Science

Starring Anna Kendrick, Reece Thompson, Dionne Audain, Utkarsh Ambudkar, John Patrick Barry, Lisbeth Bartlett, Jeanette Brox, and Jen Carden

MPAA RATING: R for some sexual content and language

Picturehouse Entertainment
Comedy  |  Drama
101 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters August 10, 2007

A teenager tackles the mysteries of life, love and public speaking in Rocket Science, a wry comedy of adolescent angst. Life is not easy for teenager Hal Hefner. His parents have split, his older brother is an obsessive-compulsive and he has an unpredictable stutter. Given that his active mind and quick wit tend to be obscured by his problematic voice, Hal is not an obvious candidate for his school's high-powered debate team. So when the star of debate team, Ginny Ryerson, asks him to be her partner, Hal rises to the occasion, and in doing so he scores a victory that has nothing to do with winning a debate, but everything to do with finding his voice. (Picturehouse Entertainment)

WRITTEN BY
Jeffrey Blitz

DIRECTED BY
Jeffrey Blitz

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

73 / 100

Critic Reviews

91 Portland Oregonian M. E. Russell
A dry, vicious and deeply moving little comedy that sort of takes the structure of a teen sports movie, then undermines that structure at every turn.
91 Baltimore Sun Michael Sragow
Fresh, funny and unfailingly observant, Rocket Science is a mood-swinging movie about adolescence that lifts audiences' spirits even when its hero is down in the dumps.
90 Film Threat Zack Haddad
This is one of those films that will either hit it big as an indie crossover like "Little Miss Sunshine,” or just make some money and become a film nerd favorite. Either way I recommend you don’t miss this awkwardly fun gem.
88 TV Guide Ken Fox
Teenage angst and adolescent agony are the stuff of sharp, observant comedy this quirky, wonderfully dry first fiction feature from documentary filmmaker Jeffrey Blitz (Spellbound).
88 Premiere Stephen Saito
As fate would have it, Rocket Science might prove to be the handiwork of a burgeoning cinematic genius.
88 The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Jennie Punter
The movies have given us plenty of loquacious teenagers – from such fast-talking truants as Ferris Bueller to such overachieving political animals as Tracy Flick ( Election). Hal Hefner is not one of these kids.
88 Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
I suspect a lot of high school students will recognize elements of real life in the movie, and that the movie will build a following. It may gross as little as "Welcome to the Dollhouse" or as much as "Clueless," but whichever it does, it's in the same league.
83 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Paula Nechak
An odd charmer with a whisper of autobiography (Blitz makes his film's protagonist a stutterer, just as the director was in school) and it's made even better by young lead actor Reece Thompson.
78 Austin Chronicle Toddy Burton
There is one absolutely inspired scene in Rocket Science, and for this scene alone, it’s pretty much worth the price of admission. It occurs when our hero, Hal (Thompson), an occasionally incoherent teenage stutterer delivers his opening remarks during a high school debate.
75 Boston Globe Ty Burr
When it's not opting for whimsy, Rocket Science makes you cringe, which is what's good about it.
75 The Onion (A.V. Club) Scott Tobias
Rocket Science doesn't go too far into Todd Solondz-style mockery, either; though painful to witness at times, Thompson's determination to face his fears--not just of speaking, but of girls, too--is heartbreakingly noble and courageous.
75 San Francisco Chronicle Peter Hartlaub
Rocket Science has the makings of either a tragedy or a crowd-pleasing underdog story, but writer-director Jeffrey Blitz instead takes the movie on a different, and ultimately more rewarding, direction.
75 USA Today Claudia Puig
It is smart, witty and blessedly unpredictable.
75 New York Daily News Jack Mathews
A quirky comedy-drama that gets the bulk of its humor from the well-placed non sequitur. It never seems to be going where you think it is, and that includes its oddly endearing dialogue.
75 New York Post Lou Lumenick
To his credit, Blitz throws in an unexpected twist that delivers a more ambivalent ending than your typical sports movie.
75 Christian Science Monitor Peter Rainer
Blitz captures high school atmosphere well – not an easy thing to do – but overall the movie coasts on quirkiness.
75 Philadelphia Inquirer Steven Rea
Blitz captures the melancholy, the rage, the wackiness and drama of adolescence, and he gets winning performances out of his young stars.
70 The Hollywood Reporter Duane Byrge
Catapulted by an endearing lead performance by Reece Daniel Thompson as a stuttering high-school student, Rocket Science transcends the predictable high-school yarn and arcs into usually unexplored domains of self-discovery and personal growth in a coming-of-age film.
70 Variety Justin Chang
This unusually voluble comedy is as eloquent about love, self-realization and adolescent angst as its protagonist is endearingly tongue-tied.
70 The New York Times Stephen Holden
The surest sign of the movie’s integrity is that it resists any temptation to build the story to a climactic debate.
70 Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
A well-meaning little picture that's piercingly genuine in places and annoyingly affected in others.
70 Washington Post Desson Thomson
Jeffrey Blitz's smart, deceptively lighthearted movie gives audiences an endearing nerd-messiah to revisit that angst for all of us and -- maybe, just maybe -- he'll end up in love and ahead.
70 Chicago Reader J.R. Jones
Quietly written and convincingly played, this coming-of-age story mines its rueful laughs from a thick vein of performance anxiety, in both senses of the term.
63 Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips
Doesn't quite work but is worth seeing anyway.
63 ReelViews James Berardinelli
The problem with Rocket Science is that the character at the center of the drama isn't very energetic or, truth be told, interesting. This makes it difficult at times to remain engaged in the unfolding tale.
60 Village Voice Jim Ridley
Once Rocket Science enters the realm of the debate competition, the director's eye for detail never deserts him.
50 Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
One of those terminally annoying, depressive-yet-coy Sundance faves in which the tale of a mopey teen misfit unfolds behind a hard candy shell of irony.
50 Charlotte Observer Lawrence Toppman
For all its flashes of emotional honesty and mordant humor, is nonsense at its core.

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