Metacritic Film

Dan in Real Life

Starring Steve Carell, Juliette Binoche, Dane Cook, Norbert Leo Butz, John Mahoney, and Dianne Wiest

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for some innuendo

Touchstone Pictures
Comedy  |  Drama  |  Romance
95 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters October 26, 2007

Advice columnist Dan Burns is an expert on relationships, but struggles to succeed as a brother a song and a single parent. (Touchstone Pictures)

WRITTEN BY
Pierce Gardner
Peter Hedges

DIRECTED BY
Peter Hedges

Overall Metascore

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

65 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 San Francisco Chronicle
Dan in Real Life fires on so many circuits that at times it's actually shocking how good it is.
91 Entertainment Weekly
A nimble and supple and moving comedy.
88 Rolling Stone
Carell shows a whole new side to his talents.
88 Chicago Tribune
As a director Hedges is smart enough to allow his actors to share the frame and interact and let the material breathe.
88 Premiere
A smart, sweet, and thoroughly disarming ensemble comedy that isn't afraid to wear its humanism on its sleeve.
80 Los Angeles Times
Dan offers the most pleasing kind of unforced charm as it uses a terrific plot device to examine the conflicts between family and romance as well as the joy and pain of being in love.
80 The Hollywood Reporter
Provides Steve Carell and Juliette Binoche with comic roles that fit them like designer threads.
80 Variety
Deftly interlaces heart and humor in a witty, warm and well-observed comedy about the unexpected and inconvenient blooming of romance at the weekend gathering of an extended family.
75 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Novelist-turned-writer/director Peter Hedges follows up his "Pieces Of April" debut with a comedy that's at once overstuffed and surprisingly subtle.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
If the film has a flaw, and I'm afraid it does, it's the Sondre Lerche songs on the soundtrack. They are too foregrounded and literal, either commenting on the action or expounding on associated topics. In such a laid-back movie, they're in our face.
75 TV Guide
Watching Binoche dithering about an American comedy takes some getting used to, but she's a believable soul mate for the hangdog Carell. The rest of the family, however, has got to go.
75 New York Post
The anti-Ben Stiller comedy: There's humiliation aplenty but no mugging, no abuse to the crotch region, no straining to be outrageous.
70 Time
In a brief review in Time magazine this week, I gave Dan a gentleman's B-. Let me try to remember why. Because the pressure of keeping his ardor secret turns Dan pleasingly cranky.
70 Salon.com
There's nothing groundbreaking about Dan in Real Life -- it's a picture that could have been made 10 or 20 years ago -- and yet its easygoing, affable nature is exactly what makes it pleasurable.
70 The New York Times
Dan in Real Life is neither wildly farcical nor mockingly cruel, but rather, for the most part, winningly gentle and observant.
63 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
In the end, the commercial necessity of wrapping up a family comedy in less than 100 minutes seems to have trumped anything real about Dan's life.
63 Miami Herald
Dan in Real Life is basically a slightly less-sappy version of "TheFamily Stone."
63 New York Daily News
Sweet it is. Remotely connected to real life, however, it is not.
63 Philadelphia Inquirer
Almost reflexively, the filmmakers skirt Dan's messier conflicts. But it is the moments when they don't dance around the awkward issue of a brother falling for his brother's girl that Dan is the most poignant.
63 Charlotte Observer
Cook has as much depth as a coaster, so it's impossible under any circumstances to imagine Binoche falling in love with him. Her complicated, heartfelt performance is the reason to see the film: When she's around, she pierces the soothing gray nothingness with shafts of sunlight.
60 Village Voice Robert Wilonsky
Dan in Real Life steals from that line in "Virgin" about Carell kinda looking like Luke Wilson, since here Carell is, after all, playing the Luke Wilson role from "The Family Stone."
60 Film Threat
On its own terms, the picture is at least as contrived as it is charming and its characters in many cases bear less resemblance to flesh and blood human beings than those in a Farrelly brothers farce.
60 Empire Ian Nathan
A small but sweetly formed comedy of romantic misfortune that can’t quite keep Hollywood at bay.
58 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
The cozy, lived-in atmosphere created by the ensemble and the unlikely chemistry of Carell and Binoche are so genuine that you wish the rest of the film was just as effortless and authentic.
50 ReelViews
Beneath its aw-shucks, wants-to-be-liked exterior, this is a bankrupt motion picture. It's cloying, artificial, and not the least bit romantic.
50 USA Today
Dan in Real Life takes a pleasant premise and calls upon the talents of engaging actors and generally squanders both.
50 Wall Street Journal
Pleasing moments don't add up to a feature film, even though this one strives desperately for substance and coherence by slathering its slender story with treacly family values.
50 Austin Chronicle
All goes according to course, and that's exactly the problem with Dan in Real Life.
50 Christian Science Monitor Robert Koehler
Bad movies invariably stem from bad ideas, and the worst of the several rancid ideas packed inside of Dan in Real Life is that Steve Carell could be the new Alan Alda.
50 Washington Post
Filmgoers haven't seen a family this neurotically enmeshed since the last Diane Keaton movie.
50 Boston Globe
There's a great movie to be had in the notion of a busybody whose advice keeps blowing up in his face, but Dan in Real Life merely sets it up and walks away.
50 Chicago Reader
The setup of this comedy by director-cowriter Peter Hedges (Pieces of April) and some subsequent twists may be contrived, and the laughs aren't very plentiful, but much of the behavior seems real, and the able cast makes the most of it.
42 Baltimore Sun
With all its cloying, tone-deaf attempts at genuine emotional warmth, all it really deserves is to be avoided.
25 Portland Oregonian
I could see people enjoying Dan in Real Life, I guess -- the scenery is nice and the people are pretty and the songs are cute little emotion substitutes. But Dan? Buddy? It's not all about you.

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