Genre:
Comedy
Director: Jason Reitman
Starring: Aaron Eckhart, Maria Bello, Cameron
Bright, Adam Brody, Sam Elliott, Katie Holmes, David Koechner,
Rob Lowe, William H. Macy, Robert Duvall
RunTime: 1 hr 32 mins
Released By: 20th Century Fox
Rating: M18 (Sexual References)
Opening
Day: 6 July 2006
Synopsis
:
The
hero of THANK YOU FOR SMOKING is Nick Naylor, chief spokesman
for Big Tobacco, who makes his living defending the rights
of smokers and cigarette makers in today's neo-puritanical
culture. Confronted by health zealots out to ban tobacco and
an opportunistic senator, who wants to put poison labels on
cigarette packs, Nick goes on a PR offensive, spinning away
the dangers of cigarettes on TV talk shows and enlisting a
Hollywood super-agent to promote smoking in movies. Nick's
newfound notoriety attracts the attention of both tobacco's
head honcho and an investigative reporter for an influential
Washington daily. Nick says he is just doing what it takes
to pay the mortgage, but he begins to think about how his
work makes him look in the eyes of his young son Joey.
Movie
Review:
Nick Naylor (Aaron Eckhart) is the chief spokesman for Big
Tobacco and he lobbies for cigarettes. He is as witty as they
come, an instantly likeable person for all the right reasons
– charming, warm, a good father and cruelly funny. The
only thing ostensibly wrong with him is that he defends cigarettes.
Ah, but as Nick says, “If you argue correctly, you can
never be wrong.” So he isn’t.
And that’s really what “Thank You For Smoking”
is about – if you argue correctly, people will believe
anything. It attacks the culture of spin in today’s
media, making use of Nick’s persuasive talents and charisma
to show how easy it is to manipulate and persuade. On a daytime
talk show Nick delivers a pre-emptive strike to the crusaders
he is up against: pointing to the cancer-stricken boy beside
him, he says, "It's in our best interests to keep Robin
alive and smoking. The anti-smoking people want Robin to die."
Yet even more worthy of abuse is the public’s appetite
for spin: the audience applauds. Later even Nick gets one-upped
by the reporter he’s dating (Katie Holmes in an ill-fitted
role) when, in moments of weakness he should have known better
to avoid, he hands her the front-page scoop she seeks. It’s
an easy plot contrivance but also a subtle irony, and that
too is what the movie is about – masking clever details
with hilarious distractions.
As far as funny goes, this movie clocks miles, but it feels
like “Thank You For Smoking” contents to wade
in the safe waters of comedy for the most part and only half-confronting
the more dangerous terrains of satire. The wit is sharp and
lightning fast, but some jokes seem to sound slightly similar
towards the end. There are semblances of a mushy ending too
but that aside, the stylistic swagger of the movie is consistent
throughout.
Well-written dialogues are something of a lost art but, adapted
from Christopher Buckley’s eponymous novel, this movie
has no lack of eloquence and gifted irony – all credit
to director/writer Jason Reitman for a job well done. One
of the best jokes in “Thank You For Smoking” is
that of the MOD Squad, a group of fellow lobbyists (firearms;
alcohol) Nick lunches with weekly, MOD being the acronym for
Merchants of Death. In handling the MOD Squad scenes Reitman
displays a natural brilliance for comedy: he executes the
scenes as though with the Midas touch, creating a truly innovative
sequence that screams potential and style. There is no doubt
“Thank You For Smoking” is a Reitman film through
and through.
But “Thank You For Smoking” is also Nick’s
movie, less about ethical crusades than it is a platform to
showcase his oratory talents, more about Nick’s relationship
with his son than a cynical charge on either side of the smoking
debate. It is a lampoon that targets the lapdogs of power
and pop culture (personified by Adam Brody’s hilariously
groveling character) and makes fun of uptight moralizers who
define hypocrisy (William H. Macy in a douche of a role).
Yet, still beyond the excellent direction and script is a
cast that’s pitch-perfect, with almost every supporting
role stealing scenes left right and centre. In Rob Lowe the
casting directors have struck comedic gold – the exchange
between his Hollywood mega agent role Jeff Megall and Nick
is a stroke of genius. Not to forget Aaron Eckhart’s
cutting turn as the politically incorrect and deliciously
cocky Nick – Eckhart slips into the role with such sleekness
that you forget he’s only acting. Maria Bello and David
Koechner make up the MOD Squad and are sublime, their performances
conveying the energy of repartee, keeping the movie in pace.
Katie Holmes is the only weak link as scheming reporter Heather
Holloway but perhaps it is her reputation I question, not
her acting.
“Thank You For Smoking” is not perfect, but for
every weakness I have pertaining to movies, this film answers
with such unapologetic irreverence that it’s impossible
to put it down. Rare in the quality of script, confident from
start to finish and delectably snide from every angle, this
is a movie that stands alone in its own class.
Movie Rating:
((A comedy of the highest quality, “Thank You For Smoking”
qualifies for essential viewing)
Review
by Angeline Chui
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