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Thank You for Smoking
Thank You for Smoking — Nick Naylor doesn't hide the truth...he filters it.
2005 7 19.8K R views saved
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Thank You for Smoking

2005 7 19.8K R views saved
Thank You for Smoking

Nick Naylor is a charismatic spin-doctor for Big Tobacco who'll fight to protect America's right to smoke -- even if it kills him -- while still remaining a role model for his 12-year old son. When he incurs the wrath of a senator bent on snuffing out cigarettes, Nick's powers of "filtering the truth" will be put to the test.

Countries: US
Languages: English
Content Rating: R
Runtime: 1hrs 32min
Status: Released
Release date: 2005-09-09
Release format: Streaming — Oct 03, 2006
Comments
WatchByMood
@watchbymood 7 years ago

//EN-GTranslate
Great experience, Marketer's book, maximum rating 10 Stars / Totally Ninja!
//CZ
Skvělý zážitek, bible každého marketéra, maximální hodnocení 10 Stars / Totally Ninja!

0
WatchByMood
@watchbymood 7 years ago

//EN-GTranslate
Great experience, Marketer's book, maximum rating 10 Stars / Totally Ninja!
//CZ
Skvělý zážitek, bible každého marketéra, maximální hodnocení 10 Stars / Totally Ninja!

0
Adam B
@barcaxavi 13 years ago

Great actors, story and movie. Loved it!

3
Siggi
@siggi963 7 months ago

This is an excellent comedy about how the tobacco industry manipulated the truth for decades in order to deny that smoking is bad for your health. Though a fictional story, it is based on true events that happened in similar fashion over the years. Just great entertainment with excellent acting performances.

0
Parmlog
@parmlog 7 years ago

Clever writing, great actors and a solid story makes this a film I think you will like, not love

1
@horror-future-7 7 years ago

Good movie tough in some points but you can understand a lot of things i suggest to anyone 7.3/10

0
IHateBadMovies.com
@adammorgan 3 years ago

I recently watched Christopher Guest's For Your Consideration, which is satire of the movie industry. Like that movie, this movie is just *ok*. I smirked at several scenes but by no means did I think either film is a great movie. I think that's the problem with satire in film - there is a high floor and a low ceiling. I completely got what each movie was trying to do - even in the hands of capable directors they just aren't great viewing experiences.

follow me at https://IHATEBadMovies.com or facebook IHATEBadMovies

3
moonkodi
@moonkodi 8 years ago

Starts off very strong with good characters and dialogue. Lots of good scenes to introduce us to the story and characters. I like some of the relationships.
King of dips in energy and with new stimulating ideas for me. It didn't take me on an interesting enough journey in the second half. Maybe I'll give it another go.

1
TheLazyReviewer
@thelazyreviewer 1 year ago

Film 101 (Goal: 300) of 2024

Thank You for Smoking is a clever satire of American Government, the movie industry and the media, among other things. The film has a fantastic cast, including (but not limited to) Katie Holmes, William H. Macy, Robert Duvall, J.K. Simmons. But the film is anchored by an excellent leading man performance from Aaron Eckhart (before The Dark Knight). More modern ensemble films have cameos for the sake of cameos, at the expensive of connective story. This however puts the narrative first, and it leads to better opportunities and performances when the casts members step in.

While Thank You for Smoking is witty and clever, the film begins with such explosive energy, in it's dialogue, it's editing and it's production that by the time the 2nd act really kicks in, and the drama begins to take shape, that the second half of the film feels like a completely different film all together. And while it's still well acted, directed, etc. it just does not maintain that energy that made the first half so vibrant. It's not so much that it feels like a film of two halves, but if you asked me to choose only half the film to watch for the rest of my life - I'm picking the first half, every single time.

0
@drqshadow 5 years ago

A whole slew of wonderful actors (and Katie Holmes) get together to spit zingers and run circles around unprepared TV experts in this dark, sleazy satire about the "flexible morals" necessary to find work as a lobbyist.

Aaron Eckhart is the top of these dogs, a master manipulator hired by big tobacco to turn public opinion against kids with cancer and well-meaning legislature, and he's very good at the gig. Along for the ride are JK Simmons, Rob Lowe, David Koechner, Maria Bello and Robert Duvall, as a variety of increasingly seedy, but universally well-spoken, coworkers and acquaintances. The film rides its sweet spot for a good long while, watching the scumbags bounce around swanky offices or talk show sets, saying witty, misleading shit, but that kind of wicked entertainment can't last forever.

Eventually, Eckhart's man finds himself in a spot of trouble - several spots, in fact - with varying degrees of plot relevance. Chief among these is the personal development of his young, pre-teen son, who still sees dad as a god among men and seeks to emulate his every move. There's an interesting character conflict in that thread, the struggle between raising a well-adjusted young man and paying the piper for a high-expense lifestyle, and its resolution is bright, earnest and revealing. Other subplots, like a wacky assassination attempt or a smear piece in the local newspaper, are more shallow and distracting. Padding to stretch a film that's already rather short. Entertaining and amusing, this is a great chance for several of my favorite supporting actors to rub elbows and bang heads, but a hair on the thin, superficial side.

0
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