The movie "Smart People" passes this critic's test
Laila Hanson
Issue date: 4/8/08 Section: Arts & Society
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Like everyone else will probably say, I will admit that I saw "Smart People" to see the highly praised Ellen Page relive her glorious quirkiness once again. She did, for the most part. Her sarcasm and wit stayed strong, even though she was embedded in an entirely different role from "Juno." Instead of a cute, dorky girl into lots of cool, dorky music, Page plays a scholarly high school senior in, "Smart People," eager to make the perfect score on her SATs and get into a great school. But, this movie is not really about Page and her snooty sounding character Vanessa Wetherhold, although she does have an interesting plot of her own. It's about Dennis Quaid, the man who plays her father, Lawrence.
Still getting over his dead wife, Lawrence Wetherhold is a bitter English professor teaching at Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania. He does not like getting along with people, and does not hide this fact. With several failing attempts to publish his novel under his belt as well, he is certainly an angry man.
After his car is towed for taking up two spots instead of one, Wetherhold attempts to break into the impound lot. He succeeds-for a moment-until the attendant chases after him and he falls and gives himself a concussion. When he wakes up, he is in a hospital and finds out from his attractive ex-student doctor (Sarah Jessica Parker) that he cannot legally drive for 6 months. Enter Wetherhold's mooching adopted brother, Chuck (Thomas Haden Church) who deposits himself in Lawrence's house as his unappreciated pseudo chaffeur.
2008 Woodie Awards

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