Title: As Good As He
Gets: As a man from the heartland, Jack Nicholson gives a heartbreaking
performance in About Schmidt.(Arts/Movies)(Movie
Review)
Date: 12/16/2002; Publication: Time; Author: Schickel,
Richard
Byline: Richard Schickel
Warren Schmidt moves ponderously. This is not because Jack Nicholson, who
plays him to perfection, is particularly weighty or out of shape for a
66-year-old man. What slows him is the rhythms of his
region and his culture; he is a Midwesterner of the Wasp persuasion, which
means he is solid, stolid and silent, except when exchanging arm's-length
pleasantries with his friends. Like so many men of his class and place, he has
bent himself to a job (as an insurance company actuary) that is at once dull
and intricate and to a city (
But, speaking of denial, I had forgotten that men like Warren Schmidt still
exist, even though they are my people. I was raised among them, though I fled
their phlegmish company decades ago to join the chattering classes. Once in a
while I read something that evokes them--Evan S. Connell's lovely novels about
Mr. and Mrs. Bridge, Garrison Keillor's sweet-savage
I should have known better. After all, some of my old high school buddies still do pretty good Warren Schmidt imitations. So the first and most lasting surprise about Alexander Payne's About Schmidt is finding its protagonist unaltered by the passing years. The street he lives on still looks like the street where I grew up. His ability to turn potential drama into manageable banality remains unchanged.
And yet Schmidt has what the rest of us have learned to call "issues." His wife, with whom he has settled into a life of hostile boredom, dies suddenly. She leaves him the house trailer in which they planned to embrace a footloose life and evidence that she once had an affair with his best friend. His ill-favored but blindly loved daughter Jeannie (Hope Davis) is about to marry a slippery water-bed salesman (Dermot Mulroney) and be absorbed into his awful family. They are ruled over by a mom (Kathy Bates) who is an overbearing monster of cordiality, and are lost in a time warp more preposterous than Schmidt's: they still live like '60s hippies.
Off Schmidt goes in his trailer to rescue Jeannie.
After a lifetime of self-effacement, a lifetime in which his every clumsy word
has driven Jeannie into deeper resentment, we wonder if finally he will find
the gumption to break the habit of polite dissimulation. What gives us hope is
a character we never see. His name is Ndugo. He's a 6-year-old Tanzanian boy
whom
Perhaps we is the wrong pronoun. Maybe you would be
more appropriate. Because not for a moment did I think Nicholson or Payne--an
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