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Thank You for Smoking

 
Movies:

Thank You for Smoking

  • Director: Jason Reitman
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Satire
  • Themes: Work Ethics, Office Politics, Members of the Press
  • Main Cast: Aaron Eckhart, Maria Bello, Cameron Bright, Adam Brody, Sam Elliott
  • Release Year: 2005
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 92 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

The directorial debut from Jason Reitman, the media satire Thank You for Smoking stars Aaron Eckhart as Nick, a man who has turned spinning news and information into a successful career for the tobacco lobby. He plots strategies with his colleagues (Maria Bello and David Koechner) on how to make other dangerous products more appealing to the American public. Nick ends up going to Hollywood with his young son (Cameron Bright) in order to get a movie producer to include characters smoking in his newest film. Nick is kidnapped by a vigilante group concerned about the harmful nature of his product. The cast includes William H. Macy as a Senator who runs on a strong anti-tobacco position, Rob Lowe as the Hollywood bigwig, and Robert Duvall as the king of the tobacco industry. The film is an adaptation of the novel of the same name by Christopher Buckley. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

Review

Jason Reitman's adaptation of Thank You for Smoking aims its satirical slings at something much bigger than the smoking lobby. Aaron Eckhart's Nick Naylor gleefully manipulates everyone and everything in his path. While the film gets huge laughs from the audacious (though not quite totally unbelievable) sentiments Naylor expresses on behalf of the tobacco industry, it also gives this media Machiavelli a heart simply by showing that his ability to shape an argument isn't something he has to work on or think about -- it comes to him naturally. Some might think he is soulless, but it would be more accurate to say that spinning is his soul. The film would work if it settled for just mocking big business, but it actually analyzes how someone who instinctually spins the truth can still live an honorable life. Even more refreshing is that Naylor never really once questions what he does. He certainly goes through a rough patch of self-pity, but never once does he regret what he does or consider how what he is doing affects others. He is a man naturally suited to having this job in this day and age. A lazy actor would have simply amped up the smarm factor playing Naylor, but Eckhart plays the character with pride. That pride makes him engaging and even somewhat sympathetic. With one strong, unique lead character, Reitman is able to serve up big laughs while commenting on the nature of public discourse in the age of media saturation. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

Cast

Katie Holmes - Heather Holloway; David Koechner - Bobby Jay Bliss; Rob Lowe - Jeff Megall; William H. Macy - Senator Ortolan Finistirre; J.K. Simmons - BR; Robert Duvall - The Captain; Kim Dickens - Jill Naylor; Connie Ray - Pearl; Todd Louiso - Ron Goode; Earl Billings - Senator Dupree; Bruce French - Gentleman #2; Melora Hardin - Interviewer; Joan Lunden - Herself; Aaron Lustig - Doctor; Michael Mantell - Dr. Meisenbach; Marianne Muellerleile - Teacher; Catherine Reitman - Reporter #1; Dennis Miller - Himself; Richard Speight, Jr. - Trainee; Spencer Garrett - Senator Lothridge; Kathryn Winslow - Jeanette; Nancy O'Dell - Herself; Sean Patrick Murphy - Reporter #2; Mary Jo Smith - Sue Maclean; Tonyo Melendez - Mr. Herera; David Sacks - Oil Lobbyist; Timothy Dowling - EGO Assistant; Courtney Taylor Burness - Kid # 3; Brian Palermo - Voice Of F.B.I. Agent; Jordan Garrett - Kid # 2; Daniel Travis - Brad; Jordan Orr - Kid # 4; Karen Harrison - Nurse; Alex Diaz - Kid # 1; Robert L. Richards - Gentleman #3; Roy Jenkins - Debate Moderator; Eric Haberman - Robin Williger; Jeff Witzke - Kidnapper; Eric Maldonado - Tobacco Club Host; Renee Graham - Tiffany; Terry James - Ski Mask #1; Marc Scizak - Ski Mask #2; Rachel Thorp - Flighty Girl; Howard Weitzman - Gentleman #1

Credit

Eveleen Anne Bandy - Associate Producer, Stephen Belafonte - Associate Producer, Craig Dollinger - Boom Operator, Paul Flinton - Boom Operator, Betsy Royall Casting - Casting, Mindy Marin - Co-producer, Daniel Brunt - Co-producer, Daniel Dubiecki - Co-producer, Michael R. Newman - Co-producer, Daniel Glicker - Costume Designer, Jason Reitman - Director, Dana E. Glauberman - Editor, Edward R. Pressman - Executive Producer, Peter Thiel - Executive Producer, Michael Beugg - Executive Producer, Alessandro Camon - Executive Producer, Elon Musk - Executive Producer, Max Levchin - Executive Producer, Mark Woolway - Executive Producer, John Schmidt - Executive Producer, Christopher Miller - Location Manager, John V Latenser - Location Manager, Rolfe Kent - Composer (Music Score), Peter Afterman - Musical Direction/Supervision, Margaret Yen - Musical Direction/Supervision, Elisabeth Fry - Makeup, Robin Luce - Makeup, David Insley - Camera Operator, Tommy Lohmann - Camera Operator, Daniel Nichols - Camera Operator, Scott Kaye - Camera Operator, Bruce Oldham - Camera Operator, Karen Iacofano - Camera Operator, Joseph G. Pier - Camera Operator, Steve Saklad - Production Designer, Jim Whitaker - Cinematographer, David Sacks - Producer, Robert Althoff - Recording, Richard Dwan - Sound Editor, Marc Scizak - Stunts, Terry James - Stunts Coordinator, Michael Beugg - Unit Production Manager, Jason Reitman - Screenwriter, Nicole Hirsch-Whitaker - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Cosmas Paul Bolger Jr. - Visual Effects Supervisor, Jessica Brooks Grant - Unit Publicist, Jeremy Walker & Associates - Unit Publicist, Jeremy Walker & Associates - Unit Publicist, Josh Medak - First Assistant Camera, Donald Burghardt - First Assistant Camera, Packy Lennon - Gaffer, Stuart M. Abramson - Grip, Michael O'Leary - Grip, Gary C. Beaird - Grip, Tony Ayala - Grip, Mike Delnero - Grip, Tom Lamont - Grip, Alex Reilly - Grip, Blake Santoro - Grip, Robert Santoro - Grip, Lee Shapira - Grip, Dean Citroni - Key Grip, Nicky South - Music Editor, Michael M. Toji - Post Production Supervisor, Heather Ignarro - Production Coordinator, Sharon Stetzel - Production Coordinator, Bob Dohrmann - Production Supervisor, Neal W. Zoromski - Properties Master, Adam Jenkins - Re-Recording Mixer, Melissa Hofmann - Re-Recording Mixer, J. Stanley Johnston - Re-Recording Mixer, Mary Anne Seward - Script Supervisor, Eveleen Anne Bandy - Second Assistant Director, Xanthus Valvan - Second Assistant Director, Larry Fiorirro - Special Effects Coordinator, Kenji Luster - Steadicam Operator, Tommy Lohmann - Steadicam Operator, Colin Hudson - Steadicam Operator, Dale Robinette - Still Photographer, Perry Robertson - Supervising Sound Editor, Cosmas Paul Bolger Jr. - Visual Effects Producer, Paul Drenning - ADR Mixer, Steven Samanen - Assistant Art Director, Jonathan Reich - Assistant Location Manager, Eric Hunsaker - Assistant Properties, Kevin A. Zimmerman - Assistant Sound Editor, Ted Ayd - Best Boy Electric, Konrad Sigurdsson - Best Boy Electric, Rick Strodel - Best Boy Grip, Deano Manley - Best Boy Grip, Daniel Q. Reilly - Best Boy Grip, Charlie Newberry - Camera Loader, Tim Clarke - Camera Loader, Andrew Depung - Camera Loader, Ember Truesdell - Casting Assistant, Cathy Weiner - Casting Assistant, Deborah Dalton - Costumes Supervisor, Julie Glick Glicman - Costumes Supervisor, Rhett Bloomquist - Dolly Grip, Shawn Stoddard - Dolly Grip, Ralph Coon - Electrician, Timothy Gordon - Electrician, Tim Gillis - Electrician, Phil Hardt - Electrician, Patrick M. Brennan - Electrician, Rudy Martinez - Electrician, Vladimir Tamayo - Electrician, Kenneth H. Harris - Electrician, Tammy L. Smith - Extra Casting, Dixie Webster-Davis - Extra Casting, Smith & Webster-Davis Casting - Extra Casting, Amy Smolev - First Assistant Accountant, Jill Rosenblatt - First Assistant Accountant, Robert Malina - First Assistant Editor, Cynthia Merrill - Foley Artist, Patrick Cabral - Foley Artist, Sherri Bramlett - Key Hairstylist, Maxine Morris - Key Hairstylist, Paul Arthur Hartman - Leadman, Carl Catanese - Leadman, Phillip Montgomery - Personal Assistant, Valarie Payne - Personal Assistant, Jeffrey Wank - Personal Assistant, Character Counts! - Post Production Accountant, Management Group - Post Production Accountant, Bob Weber - Post Production Accountant, Adam Zadikoff - Post Production Assistant, Gavin J. Behrman - Production Accountant, Stuart Stein - Second Assistant Camera, Brett Gates - Second Assistant Camera, Scott Brown - Second Second Assistant Director, Casey Mako - Second Second Assistant Director, Kurt Uebersax - Second Second Assistant Director, Stephen G. Shifflette - Set Dresser, Melissa Morgan - Set Production Assistant, Joe Dornich - Set Production Assistant, Nino Aldi - Set Production Assistant, Jennifer Buomamtony - Set Production Assistant, Uday Sharad Joshi - Set Production Assistant, Dana Lewis - Set Production Assistant, Asa McCall - Set Production Assistant, Gregory S. Purcell - Set Production Assistant, Edward Lin - Storyboard Artist, Rick "Easy" Fese - Transportation Captain, Verdell E. Veney - Transportation Captain, Gilbert Young - Transportation Coordinator, Geno Hart - Transportation Coordinator, Kurt Meisenbach - Set Decorator, David J. Bloomfield - Co-Executive Producer, Christopher Buckley - Book Author, Steve Sheridan - Color Timing, Glenn Williams - Construction Foreman, Nate Maruccio - Craft Service/Catering, Genaro Rodriguez - Craft Service/Catering, Carmelo Randazzo - Craft Service/Catering, Cast And Crew Catering - Craft Service/Catering, Tom Cornelius - Craft Service/Catering, Julie Briggs - Craft Service/Catering, Black Diamond Catching - Craft Service/Catering, Peter Roskovich - Craft Service/Catering, Lee Jennings - Driver, Jerry Knight - Driver, William Smallwood - Driver, Carlos M. Serrano - Driver, Joseph Taggart - Driver, Mike Belt - Driver, Regelio N. Loera - Driver, Scott Tyler - Driver, Glynn Williams - Driver, Jon R. Cosham - Driver, Michael L. "Bud" Ruben - Driver, Neil Chisholm - Driver, Josh Sarfaty - Driver, Ralph Gordon Blaine - Driver, Anthony Canard - Driver, Donald Diggs - Driver, Stephen Monaghan - Driver, Eugene Tillman - Driver, Glem Williams - Driver, Johnny Williams - Driver, Geordy Sincavage - Foley Mixer, Magic Film & Video Works - Negative Cutter, Steven A. Morrow - Production Sound Mixer, Len Schmitz - Production Sound Mixer, David Falicki - Set Medic/First Aid, Patrice M. King - Set Medic/First Aid, Mike Artino - Set Medic/First Aid, Jeff Johnson - Set Medic/First Aid, Virgil Sanchez - Special Effects Technician, Barney Cabral - Supervising ADR Editor, Pete Albert - Video Assist, Bob Sterry - Video Assist, Michael Baird - Video Assist, Robert Malina - Visual Effects Editor, Theresa Greene - Art Department Coordinator, Marsha Lewis - Department Head Hair, John Jackson - Department Head Makeup, Casey Garrett - Properties Maker, Kevin Wenger - Properties Maker, Jason Blumenfeld - Assistant Director

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Wikipedia: Thank You for Smoking
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Thank You for Smoking

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Jason Reitman
Produced by David O. Sacks
Edward R. Pressman
Written by Novel:
Christopher Buckley
Screenplay:
Jason Reitman
Starring Aaron Eckhart
Cameron Bright
Katie Holmes
Maria Bello
David Koechner
Rob Lowe
Adam Brody
Sam Elliot
William H. Macy
J.K. Simmons
and Robert Duvall
Music by Rolfe Kent
Cinematography James Whitaker
Editing by Dana E. Glauberman
Distributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures
Release date(s) March 17, 2006 (limited)
April 14, 2006
Running time 92 min.
Country USA
Language English
Budget $6,500,000
Gross revenue $39,232,211

Thank You for Smoking is a 2006 comedy-drama film satire directed by Jason Reitman and produced by David O. Sacks. It is based on the 1994 novel of the same name by Christopher Buckley.

The film was released in a limited run on March 17, 2006, and had a wide release on April 14. As of 2007, the film has grossed a total of more than US$39 million worldwide.[1] On November 24, 2006, NBC announced that it is developing a television pilot based on the film.[2] The film was released on DVD in the US on October 3, 2006, and in the UK on January 8, 2007.

Contents

Plot

Nick Naylor (Aaron Eckhart) is the Vice President and the chief spokesman for the Academy of Tobacco Studies (Tobacco Institute), a tobacco lobby whose stated purpose is to research the links between smoking cigarettes and lung cancer. Unsurprisingly, the group, funded by cigarette companies, does not find any link between the two. Nick's job requires him to inform the public of these results, as well as defend the rights of smokers. The film follows his career as a talking head for Big Tobacco, appearing in both public speaking engagements and on television programs. Each week, Nick meets with Polly Bailey (Maria Bello) and Bobby Jay Bliss (David Koechner), lobbyists for the alcohol and firearms industries respectively, for lunch and mutual support. The three jokingly refer to themselves as "the M.O.D. Squad" (alluding to both the phrase "Merchants Of Death" and the television show The Mod Squad).

Faced with a bill to add a skull and crossbones to all cigarette packaging, Nick proposes an idea to his boss, BR (J.K. Simmons) to get actors in films to start smoking on screen again as in the 1920s and 1930s, and thus "put the sex back in cigarettes". BR sends him to Hollywood to meet with superagent Jeff Megall (Rob Lowe) and arrange product placement. Nick decides to bring his son, Joey (Cameron Bright), on the grounds that they do not spend enough time together since Joey's mother gained custody. As Joey asks about the details of Nick's job during the trip, they bond as Nick teaches him the art of spin.

Nick also plans to appear before the U.S. Senate to fight the packaging bill, as well as Senator Finisterre, D, Vermont (William H. Macy), the primary supporter of the bill and a long time critic of cigarettes. During an appearance on Dennis Miller's talk show to debate the issue with Finisterre, a caller threatens to kill Nick. After refusing BR's suggestion for him to hire bodyguards, Nick is soon kidnapped, and transdermal nicotine patches are placed all over his skin, sending high doses of nicotine into his blood stream, triggering a toxic response (nicotine poisoning) and nearly killing him. Luckily, he is found alive, and in a twist of irony, it was his smoking habit and resulting tolerance of nicotine which saved his life; however, he can never smoke again because of resultant hypersensitivity to the drug.

In the midst of all of this, Nick has secretly begun having sex with an attractive reporter named Heather Holloway (Katie Holmes), revealing many secrets to her during their love making, assuming it was off-the-record. She was preparing a piece about him, promising to be fair to both sides of the issue. She then publishes an article that paints Nick as a heartless monster, including Nick's dealings with the M.O.D. Squad, bribery of cancer-stricken Marlboro Man Lorne Lutch (Sam Elliott), supposed training of Joey to follow in his footsteps, and the behind-the-scenes plan to increase cigarettes in film. When Nick confronts Heather over the phone, she condescendingly states that she's like him by just working a job to pay the mortgage. Deciding that the article has either removed or completely reversed any sympathy of the public towards Nick after his kidnapping, BR decides that the Academy should distance itself from Nick and fires him. After Nick initially becomes depressed, Joey reminds him of why he does his job: to defend "defenseless" corporations such as sweatshop foremen and land mine makers.

Speaking to the press, Nick promises to clear the names of those linked to him by the article, and reveals his affair with Holloway, effectively ruining her career. He also reveals that he still intends to testify before the Senate in hopes of stopping the bill from passing. His message to the Senate was that it is not the government's job to warn the public of hazards. The essential problem is one of education, and it is the role of parents to educate their children so that they can grow to make informed choices. Otherwise, he tells the Senator from Washington, the government should put warning labels on Boeing airplanes about the risk of flying. He tells the Senator from Michigan that Fords should come with warning labels about the risk of driving cars. Then he tells Senator Finisterre that the government should mandate a warning label for Vermont cheese about the risk of heart disease. Nick then returns to his point that all of life has risk, and that the risk can be properly managed through parental education. Nick ends up performing so well at the Senate hearing that BR asks him to return to the Academy. As a reporter asks Nick if he will continue to work with the Academy, however, he fully realizes BR's motives for firing and rehiring him and decides not to return as an example to his son, completely catching BR off guard before the press. The film ends with a review of the lives of those affected by the entire situation: BR is out of work for the first time in years after the Academy is dismantled, Heather is reduced to working as a weather reporter for a small TV station, Senator Finisterre is still working on his anti-cigarette campaign by digitally removing cigarettes from classic films, and the M.O.D. Squad is still meeting weekly — with new lobbyists from the oil, fast food and hazardous waste industries being invited to the luncheon. Joey wins a school debate, and Nick begins a public relations training firm (where he is seen taking on the public fear about cell phones causing brain tumors).

Reception

The film received a generally positive critical reception. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gave it a very positive rating of 86%. It has an overall 71/100 critical rating on Metacritic.[3] Rolling Stone rated the film 3.5/4 stars describing it as an "acutely hilarious film".[4] USA Today gave a rave review; "The razor-sharp satire Thank You for Smoking is the wittiest dark comedy of the year thus far. It has appeal to all sides of the political spectrum." The review praised the film for a "quirky and intelligent rarity that elicits wry smiles and hearty laughs alike." The magazine also compared the tone of the film reminiscent of the 1999 film Election.[5] It was also warmly received by the Los Angeles Times, who called it a "very smart and funny movie" and said that it had been "shrewdly" adapted to film from novel.[6]

Cast

References

  1. ^ "Weekend Box Office". BoxOfficeMojo.com. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=thankyouforsmoking.htm. Retrieved 2006-05-07. 
  2. ^ "NBC Gets in 'Smoking' Habit". Zap2It.com. http://www.zap2it.com/tv/news/zap-nbcthankyouforsmoking,0,1387008.story. Retrieved 2006-11-24. 
  3. ^ Thank You for Smoking Metacritic
  4. ^ Thank You for Smoking (review). Rolling Stone
  5. ^ 'Thank You for Smoking' is a breath of fresh air USA Today. 16 March 2006
  6. ^ 'Thank You for Smoking' Los Angeles Times. 17 March 2006

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