About Schmidt [2003]
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Miserable, yet enchanting
  • A VERY DOWNBEAT COMEDY
  • funny but very, very downbeat
  • Great but not a comedy
  • enjoyable
About Schmidt [2003]
Starring: Jack Nicholson|Hope Davis
Director: Alexander Payne
Manufacturer: Entertainment in Video
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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Similar Items:
  1. As Good As It Gets [1998] As Good As It Gets [1998]
  2. Something's Gotta Give [2004] Something's Gotta Give [2004]
  3. The Pledge [2001] The Pledge [2001]
  4. The Crossing Guard [1996] The Crossing Guard [1996]
  5. Prizzi's Honor [1985] Prizzi's Honor [1985]

ASIN: B00007KGC8
Release Date: 2003-08-11
About Schmidt [2003]

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Miserable, yet enchanting.......2008-03-09

Admittedly the settings in this film are all very drab, but this is what enables us to get inside the Schmidt's head - he does feel that his life is drab, boring and unrewarding and that he's unappreciated and misunderstood by family and friends on just about every level.
After losing his wife, he is determined to get back some of his life before it's too late and we follow him on this cathartic journey.
With no-one to listen to him or pour out his thoughts to, Schmidt unloads everything in his letters to Ndugu - his 'adopted' son to whom he sends £22 per month sponsorship money.
Of course, with anyone other than Jack Nicholson (who seems to turn to gold anything he touches) it may not have worked so well, but that aside, most people will be able to relate to this film.
The ending is very thought-provoking and shows that people really can make a difference, whether they realise it or not.

4 out of 5 stars A VERY DOWNBEAT COMEDY.......2007-08-08

About Schmidt is the story of a man left with the curious task of trying to find meaning in his life at age 66. Most people by this age would have hopefully figured out how and why they make a difference on this Earth, but Warren Schmidt suddenly realizes he is insignificant after all these years.

Schmidt is played to perfection by Jack Nicholson. This is not the Jack Nicholson we have all grown up watching in films like Easy Rider and The Shining. This Jack Nicholson is subdued, almost lifeless at times, like the character he portrays. You keep waiting for him to explode or break out like Kevin Spacey in American Beauty, but it just isn't right for the character. He's too old, and weak by his own admission. He finds himself on a quest to make a difference in life before its over. And the film takes him for a leisurely ride.

About Schmidt is directed by Alexander Payne. He's a man apparently on a quest of his own to put our great(?) state of Nebraska on the map of the film-making world.

After some obligatory shots of downtown Omaha, we see Schmidt sitting in his office on his last day of work before retirement from the Woodman insurance company. He sits alone and quietly waits until the last seconds of the work day tick off and he's then presumably a free man. However, once the clock strikes five, nothing special happens! In most films, we might expect bells to go off, or music to start playing as the character joyfully begins his new life. Not here. Schmidt has no grand plans for the rest of his life, and that fact is punctuated by this dreary scene.

We then see Schmidt at a ho-hum retirement dinner at Johnny's Cafe, then he gets started on his ho-hum retirement. It appears the only thing he plans to do is go traveling with his wife in their giant camper which ends up as Schmidt's primary mode of transportation the rest of the film. Only there's one thing Schmidt didn't count on. His wife drops dead one day while he's out getting a Blizzard at the DQ. (It appears they shot that scene at the one over in Millard.) After his wife is in the ground, Schmidt goes through some difficult days. He really misses his wife. She seemed to completely take care of his every need as well as run his life in the process. He appears on the brink of despair at her passing until he finds evidence of an adulterous relationship with his best friend!!! After throwing out all of her belongings, he sets off on a sight-seeing tour of our great(?) state before planning to attend his daughter's wedding in Denver.

In one particularly touching scene, he pronounces forgiveness for his wife's affair and resolves to do one important thing before he leaves this earth. And that thing will be to break up his daughter's wedding. She is planning to marry a simpleton who sells water beds for a living and comes from an odd, new-age family of losers. Schmidt drives out to Denver on a mission, feeling as strong and focused as ever.

Once in Dever however, things don't go according to plans. His daughter really loves this loser, and won't hear of leaving him. Her love for this guy is as impossible for Schmidt to imagine as his contempt for her new family is for her to imagine. Schmidt and his daughter couldn't be any further apart. Kathy Bates is typically outstanding as the over-bearing mother of the man his daughter is marrying. Be forewarned though: Bates DOES in fact get naked in a scene, and it would be wise to cover your eyes lest you turn to stone! Her family is annoying and you can just tell their house smells like her feet which she has out in plain view once Schmidt first arrives there.

Schmidt isn't having any luck stopping the wedding and it looks like he'll have one last chance to make his point. At the reception, after a ghastly toast by the best man, it's Schmidt's turn to make a speech. And once again you think, "Here it comes! Here's where he'll go off and tell everyone what he thinks about them in one big comic rant!" But no, it doesn't happen. That's just not something his character is capable of. He can merely swallow his pride and say the only good things he can think of. Most of the wedding party seems to buy it, but you can tell by the look on his daughter's face that she knows it's all b/s. Schmidt is in fact too weak to break up the wedding. Witness the despair on his face as he stands at the urinal after giving the speech. He missed what he feels was his last chance to make a difference in this world.

Now Schmidt has nothing left to do but go home to die. Only in the film's last frame to we see any redemption to this tragic man's life. And a very touching moment it is. I was in tears, and that doesn't happen too often when I watch a film.

This film is worth all ten stars. This Alexander Payne appears to be for real. We already knew Jack was!! ps: Did anyone else notice the symbolism with the cows? First at the retirement dinner with his picture up next to two prize cows. Then the cattle truck being washed off near his wife's funeral. Then as he's driving down the highway in a big truck just like they are. Then at the wedding reception as the beef is being sliced while he's in obvious pain about how things have gone.

Food for thought.

3 out of 5 stars funny but very, very downbeat.......2007-04-15

If we are being honest, Jack Nicholson is no longer the exciting actor he once was, getting by these days on his hell raising reputation and his previous body of work, such as Chinatown, One Flew over the Cuckoos Nest, and such like. However, when he is given an interesting role and a good script, Jack can still pull it out of the bag, and that is exactly what he does here.
Jack plays Warren Schmidt, a recently retired insurance adjuster who realises that his life has apparently amounted to very little. He does not really know his wife, does not have any really close friends, and has been growing apart from his daughter for many years now. Even his attempts to pass on useful information to his successor at the insurance company is a failure as he quickly realises he has nothing of any use to tell this man. Warrens daughter Jeannie (Hope Davis) is due to get married to her dim witted fiancé Randall Hertzel (a very amusing role by a pony tailed and moustachioed Dermot Mulroney), and this seems to be about the only thing that can shake Warren from the stupor his life has become, because he thinks his daughter can do so much better, even though it is plainly obvious that Randall dotes on Warrens daughter. When his wife dies suddenly (about the only other thing that can shake him from his rut), Warren decides to take his retirement present, a monstrous RV, and set out on a road trip whilst travelling to attend his daughters imminent wedding, and maybe, just maybe find something worthwhile in his life.
The film is the blackest of black humour, concerned with the real world we live in and the blank spaces that we inhabit. Schmidt's life is drab and grey, as are almost all the places he visits during his trip and even his own home. His rut has left him joyless and alone, and it seems that nothing can pull him out of it as he faces his own mortality and the fact that no one is going to miss him when he is gone. We gain access to his inner thoughts in a series of voice overs as he writes letters to the 6 year old orphan Ndugo in Tanzania whom he sponsors to the tune of $22 a month, and indeed "Dear Ndugo..." becomes the catch phrase of the movie as Schmidt tells this little boy he has never met things he has never told anyone about his life, his hopes and his disappointments.
The movie has a number of excellent supporting turns, from Hope Davis as Schmidt's daughter, to Dermot Mulroney as the dopey but doting Randall, but it is Kathy Bates who catches our eye as Randall's mother Roberta, a sexually frank and down to Earth woman whose very openness appals the button downed Schmidt. Alexander Payne turns in good movie, but if there are any problems with the film it is its essentially morbid central message and the grinding way it gets this across. Although there are a number of nice scenes, particularly where Schmidt attempts to commune with his deceased wife, and some genuinely laugh out loud moments, Payne has covered this subject of disappointment and failure in a much better fashion in the superb Sideways. Still not to be sneezed at, and worth watching just for the fact that it's a film that actually makes Nicholson act, something of a rarity these days.

5 out of 5 stars Great but not a comedy.......2007-04-03

I came away impressed, in quality it definitely does the other movies Jack Nicholson has made justice. It is an excellent account of how someone old sees the world around him collapsing, by not being necessary anymore. With the loss of his wife and retirement, Schmidt is totally bewildered as to what his remaining purpose in life is.

In many ways it represents the reaction of many parents spookily well. Especially the getting to play a larger role in their children's lives way too late. Something every 25-30 year old should see, so one does not arrive at retirement age feeling one's life was wasted. It makes a powerful reminder of how painful that can be.

3 out of 5 stars enjoyable .......2006-12-01

about schmidt stars jack nicholson who after retirement and the death of his wife has to find a meaning to his life and a purpose to still live it.Schmidt tells his tales and woes in the form of letters that he writes to an african child that he sponsors so in doing that,we get a narration of sorts for the movie.
The film is poignant and indicitive of old age i guess when the world would move to fast around you,nicholson excels as a man that wants to escape himself,very good but not as funny as i was made to believe,still worth a watch though.
About Schmidt [2003] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Miserable, yet enchanting
  • A VERY DOWNBEAT COMEDY
  • funny but very, very downbeat
  • Great but not a comedy
  • enjoyable
About Schmidt [2003] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
Starring: Jack Nicholson , Kathy Bates , Hope Davis , Dermot Mulroney , and June Squibb
Director: Alexander Payne
Manufacturer: New Line Home Video
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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Similar Items:
  1. As Good As It Gets [1998] As Good As It Gets [1998]
  2. Something's Gotta Give [2004] Something's Gotta Give [2004]
  3. The Pledge [2001] The Pledge [2001]
  4. The Crossing Guard [1996] The Crossing Guard [1996]
  5. Prizzi's Honor [1985] Prizzi's Honor [1985]

ASIN: B00005JLSK
Release Date: 2003-06-03
About Schmidt [2003] (REGION 1) (NTSC)

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Miserable, yet enchanting.......2008-03-09

Admittedly the settings in this film are all very drab, but this is what enables us to get inside the Schmidt's head - he does feel that his life is drab, boring and unrewarding and that he's unappreciated and misunderstood by family and friends on just about every level.
After losing his wife, he is determined to get back some of his life before it's too late and we follow him on this cathartic journey.
With no-one to listen to him or pour out his thoughts to, Schmidt unloads everything in his letters to Ndugu - his 'adopted' son to whom he sends £22 per month sponsorship money.
Of course, with anyone other than Jack Nicholson (who seems to turn to gold anything he touches) it may not have worked so well, but that aside, most people will be able to relate to this film.
The ending is very thought-provoking and shows that people really can make a difference, whether they realise it or not.

4 out of 5 stars A VERY DOWNBEAT COMEDY.......2007-08-08

About Schmidt is the story of a man left with the curious task of trying to find meaning in his life at age 66. Most people by this age would have hopefully figured out how and why they make a difference on this Earth, but Warren Schmidt suddenly realizes he is insignificant after all these years.

Schmidt is played to perfection by Jack Nicholson. This is not the Jack Nicholson we have all grown up watching in films like Easy Rider and The Shining. This Jack Nicholson is subdued, almost lifeless at times, like the character he portrays. You keep waiting for him to explode or break out like Kevin Spacey in American Beauty, but it just isn't right for the character. He's too old, and weak by his own admission. He finds himself on a quest to make a difference in life before its over. And the film takes him for a leisurely ride.

About Schmidt is directed by Alexander Payne. He's a man apparently on a quest of his own to put our great(?) state of Nebraska on the map of the film-making world.

After some obligatory shots of downtown Omaha, we see Schmidt sitting in his office on his last day of work before retirement from the Woodman insurance company. He sits alone and quietly waits until the last seconds of the work day tick off and he's then presumably a free man. However, once the clock strikes five, nothing special happens! In most films, we might expect bells to go off, or music to start playing as the character joyfully begins his new life. Not here. Schmidt has no grand plans for the rest of his life, and that fact is punctuated by this dreary scene.

We then see Schmidt at a ho-hum retirement dinner at Johnny's Cafe, then he gets started on his ho-hum retirement. It appears the only thing he plans to do is go traveling with his wife in their giant camper which ends up as Schmidt's primary mode of transportation the rest of the film. Only there's one thing Schmidt didn't count on. His wife drops dead one day while he's out getting a Blizzard at the DQ. (It appears they shot that scene at the one over in Millard.) After his wife is in the ground, Schmidt goes through some difficult days. He really misses his wife. She seemed to completely take care of his every need as well as run his life in the process. He appears on the brink of despair at her passing until he finds evidence of an adulterous relationship with his best friend!!! After throwing out all of her belongings, he sets off on a sight-seeing tour of our great(?) state before planning to attend his daughter's wedding in Denver.

In one particularly touching scene, he pronounces forgiveness for his wife's affair and resolves to do one important thing before he leaves this earth. And that thing will be to break up his daughter's wedding. She is planning to marry a simpleton who sells water beds for a living and comes from an odd, new-age family of losers. Schmidt drives out to Denver on a mission, feeling as strong and focused as ever.

Once in Dever however, things don't go according to plans. His daughter really loves this loser, and won't hear of leaving him. Her love for this guy is as impossible for Schmidt to imagine as his contempt for her new family is for her to imagine. Schmidt and his daughter couldn't be any further apart. Kathy Bates is typically outstanding as the over-bearing mother of the man his daughter is marrying. Be forewarned though: Bates DOES in fact get naked in a scene, and it would be wise to cover your eyes lest you turn to stone! Her family is annoying and you can just tell their house smells like her feet which she has out in plain view once Schmidt first arrives there.

Schmidt isn't having any luck stopping the wedding and it looks like he'll have one last chance to make his point. At the reception, after a ghastly toast by the best man, it's Schmidt's turn to make a speech. And once again you think, "Here it comes! Here's where he'll go off and tell everyone what he thinks about them in one big comic rant!" But no, it doesn't happen. That's just not something his character is capable of. He can merely swallow his pride and say the only good things he can think of. Most of the wedding party seems to buy it, but you can tell by the look on his daughter's face that she knows it's all b/s. Schmidt is in fact too weak to break up the wedding. Witness the despair on his face as he stands at the urinal after giving the speech. He missed what he feels was his last chance to make a difference in this world.

Now Schmidt has nothing left to do but go home to die. Only in the film's last frame to we see any redemption to this tragic man's life. And a very touching moment it is. I was in tears, and that doesn't happen too often when I watch a film.

This film is worth all ten stars. This Alexander Payne appears to be for real. We already knew Jack was!! ps: Did anyone else notice the symbolism with the cows? First at the retirement dinner with his picture up next to two prize cows. Then the cattle truck being washed off near his wife's funeral. Then as he's driving down the highway in a big truck just like they are. Then at the wedding reception as the beef is being sliced while he's in obvious pain about how things have gone.

Food for thought.

3 out of 5 stars funny but very, very downbeat.......2007-04-15

If we are being honest, Jack Nicholson is no longer the exciting actor he once was, getting by these days on his hell raising reputation and his previous body of work, such as Chinatown, One Flew over the Cuckoos Nest, and such like. However, when he is given an interesting role and a good script, Jack can still pull it out of the bag, and that is exactly what he does here.
Jack plays Warren Schmidt, a recently retired insurance adjuster who realises that his life has apparently amounted to very little. He does not really know his wife, does not have any really close friends, and has been growing apart from his daughter for many years now. Even his attempts to pass on useful information to his successor at the insurance company is a failure as he quickly realises he has nothing of any use to tell this man. Warrens daughter Jeannie (Hope Davis) is due to get married to her dim witted fiancé Randall Hertzel (a very amusing role by a pony tailed and moustachioed Dermot Mulroney), and this seems to be about the only thing that can shake Warren from the stupor his life has become, because he thinks his daughter can do so much better, even though it is plainly obvious that Randall dotes on Warrens daughter. When his wife dies suddenly (about the only other thing that can shake him from his rut), Warren decides to take his retirement present, a monstrous RV, and set out on a road trip whilst travelling to attend his daughters imminent wedding, and maybe, just maybe find something worthwhile in his life.
The film is the blackest of black humour, concerned with the real world we live in and the blank spaces that we inhabit. Schmidt's life is drab and grey, as are almost all the places he visits during his trip and even his own home. His rut has left him joyless and alone, and it seems that nothing can pull him out of it as he faces his own mortality and the fact that no one is going to miss him when he is gone. We gain access to his inner thoughts in a series of voice overs as he writes letters to the 6 year old orphan Ndugo in Tanzania whom he sponsors to the tune of $22 a month, and indeed "Dear Ndugo..." becomes the catch phrase of the movie as Schmidt tells this little boy he has never met things he has never told anyone about his life, his hopes and his disappointments.
The movie has a number of excellent supporting turns, from Hope Davis as Schmidt's daughter, to Dermot Mulroney as the dopey but doting Randall, but it is Kathy Bates who catches our eye as Randall's mother Roberta, a sexually frank and down to Earth woman whose very openness appals the button downed Schmidt. Alexander Payne turns in good movie, but if there are any problems with the film it is its essentially morbid central message and the grinding way it gets this across. Although there are a number of nice scenes, particularly where Schmidt attempts to commune with his deceased wife, and some genuinely laugh out loud moments, Payne has covered this subject of disappointment and failure in a much better fashion in the superb Sideways. Still not to be sneezed at, and worth watching just for the fact that it's a film that actually makes Nicholson act, something of a rarity these days.

5 out of 5 stars Great but not a comedy.......2007-04-03

I came away impressed, in quality it definitely does the other movies Jack Nicholson has made justice. It is an excellent account of how someone old sees the world around him collapsing, by not being necessary anymore. With the loss of his wife and retirement, Schmidt is totally bewildered as to what his remaining purpose in life is.

In many ways it represents the reaction of many parents spookily well. Especially the getting to play a larger role in their children's lives way too late. Something every 25-30 year old should see, so one does not arrive at retirement age feeling one's life was wasted. It makes a powerful reminder of how painful that can be.

3 out of 5 stars enjoyable .......2006-12-01

about schmidt stars jack nicholson who after retirement and the death of his wife has to find a meaning to his life and a purpose to still live it.Schmidt tells his tales and woes in the form of letters that he writes to an african child that he sponsors so in doing that,we get a narration of sorts for the movie.
The film is poignant and indicitive of old age i guess when the world would move to fast around you,nicholson excels as a man that wants to escape himself,very good but not as funny as i was made to believe,still worth a watch though.
About Schmidt/I Am Sam [2003] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
Average customer rating: Not rated
    About Schmidt/I Am Sam [2003] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
    Starring: Jack Nicholson , Kathy Bates , Hope Davis , Dermot Mulroney , and June Squibb
    Director: Alexander Payne , and Jessie Nelson
    Manufacturer: New Line Home Video
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

    Categories Categories | DVD | Video | Action & Adventure | Children's DVD | Classics | Comedy | Crime, Thrillers & Mystery | Documentary | Drama | Fitness | Gay & Lesbian | Horror | Interactive DVDs | Music DVDs | Musicals & Classical | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Sports | Television | World Cinema
    DVD DVD | Format (binding_browse-bin) | Refinements | DVD | Video
    ASIN: B0001WTWSS
    Release Date: 2004-05-04
    About Schmidt/I Am Sam [2003] (REGION 1) (NTSC)

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