| Warren
Schmidt (Jack Nicholson) has arrived at several of life's crossroads
all at the same time. To begin with, he is retiring from a lifetime
of service as an actuary for Woodmen of the World Insurance Company,
and he feels utterly adrift. Furthermore, his only daughter Jeannie
(Hope Davis) is about to marry a boob. And his wife Helen (June
Squibb) dies suddenly after 42 years of marriage.
With no job, no wife, and no family, Warren is desperate to find
something meaningful in his thoroughly unimpressive life. He sets
out on a journey of self-discovery, exploring his roots across Nebraska
in the 35-foot motor home in which he had planned to drive around
the country with his late wife. His ultimate destination is Denver,
where he hopes to bridge the gulf between himself and his somewhat
estranged daughter by arriving early to help with her wedding preparations.
Unfortunately, he hates the groom-to-be Randall (Dermot Mulroney),
a profoundly mediocre, mediocre, underachieving waterbed salesman.
To make matters worse, Warren is appalled by the free-spirited nature
and boorish behavior of his soon-to-be in-laws (Kathy Bates and
Howard Hesseman). Warren grows swiftly convinced that his new purpose
in life is to stop his daughter's marriage.
During this darkly comic and painful odyssey, Warren details his
adventures and shares his observations with an unexpected new friend
and confessor -- Ndugu Umbo, a six-year-old Tanzanian orphan whom
he sponsors for $22 a month through an organization that advertises
on TV. From these long letters filled with a lifetime of things
unsaid, Warren begins -- perhaps for the first time -- to glimpse
himself and the life he has lived.
Directed by Alexander Payne from a screenplay by Payne and Jim Taylor,
the team behind the Oscar-nominated Election, About Schmidt is a
wryly observed slice of American life. Produced by Harry Gittes
(Breaking In, Little Nikita, Goin South) and Michael Besman (Bounce,
The Opposite of Sex), the film is executive produced by Bill Badalato
(Men of Honor, Unstrung Heroes).
About Schmidt (rated R) will be released in New York, Los Angeles
and Omaha on December 13th, 2002 and will expand on December 20th,
2002 and January 3rd, 2003 [TRAILER]
STEVEN
SNYDER'S REVIEW
Only
a few weeks ago, I wrote that all great movies must do something original.
Indeed, this year’s best films have done just that. “Minority
Report” was a creative thriller about the future, where criminals
are arrested before they commit their crimes. “The Lord of the
Rings: The Two Towers” creates a spectacle and a battle greater
in scope that any other film has ever attempted.
And now, in a completely different direction is “About Schmidt.”
It is on the short list of 2002’s greatest films, and is original
not due to its excesses but its restraint. It is brilliant exactly
because it does not force an action or an emotion, unwilling to give
in to traditional Hollywood clichés.
“About Schmidt” follows a character all too real in the
American mainstream. His name is Warren Schmidt (Jack Nicholson),
and he is introduced to the audience on his last day of work at an
insurance agency. In silence, he watches his clock tick to five, then
turns off the light and leaves his career forever.
He has little else in his life. He has a wife whom he rarely speaks
to, and it appears they have reached that stage where they are together
not out of love but habit. He has a daughter who is too busy planning
her wedding to a rather dull man to pay her parents much attention.
He has a good friend, but one that is not as loyal as Schmidt believes.
Writer and director Alexander Payne does not make Schmidt as depressing
as this description may indicate. Rather, Schmidt represents America’s
decent, hard-working mainstream that few artists have ever found interesting
enough to make a movie about. Schmidt does his job, has raised a good
family, has treated his wife well, and should now be celebrating the
fruits of his labors.
But with the realization that something is missing, “About Schmidt”
becomes a film that transcends this simple story. Underneath his surface
treasures, Schmidt’s ambition has been stripped away. The years
have beat him down, have reduced him to little more than a small cog
in the greater social machine, and he yearns for some aspect of that
human spirit that was stolen while he was too busy to notice.
It is only after a few surprises uproot Schmidt’s so-called
perfect life and make him realize that a lifetime of compromises have
shattered his inner spirit that he decides to recapture what has been
taken from him. He hits the road, sights set on preventing his daughter
from settling for a life less than what she deserves.
Many critics have inaccurately labeled “About Schmidt”
a comedy or a modern tragedy. I must admit that I did not laugh or
cry much. What I did do was think. I thought about my life, my parents,
my friends, and about the complex balance of being a responsible adult
in this society without losing the dreams and passions that keep our
hearts beating.
At the film’s center is Jack Nicholson, playing a character
unlike anything we have seen before. Schmidt is at once cheerful,
scared and determined, not a simple character to dissect but one so
real in his confusion and his fear that we hope for his success with
the belief that we too could find a similar path to self-discovery.
“About Schmidt,” however, does not make Schmidt’s
journey that transparent. There are no revelations or triumphant changes
of heart. Instead, the film seems even more genuine as we realize
Schmidt cannot easily break free from the realities of society. He
is confined and limited by what others expect of him and he is too
decent of a man to turn his back on everything he has attained.
The film’s ending is not entirely happy. It takes the good with
bad, suggesting that Schmidt cannot make his dark world bright again,
but also exposing a small glimmer of hope that, if we try hard enough,
we can make our own, small difference. Payne, in both “Schmidt”
and his earlier film “Election,” has a gift of injecting
profound meaning into such quiet, honest and humane moments.
I had one reaction that might make this film’s message a bit
clearer. As Schmidt returns from a retirement dinner early in the
film, he gets on the phone with his daughter who didn’t make
the trip to celebrate with her father. This simple scene caused me
to burst into tears. Here is a sad, joyless and empty man playing
happy for those around him. And I believe there are more Schmidts
in this world than we would like to admit.
The journey in “About Schmidt” is not about highways or
miles, but about Schmidt finding the key to some level of inner peace;
when he can finally smile, and mean it.
  
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