Jack Nicholson plays the titular character, a curmudgeonly sort who was good at what he did for a living (an actuary for an insurance company) but probably never got much true satisfaction from it or anything else in his life. He seems to have either gone through the motions of a “normal” life of getting married and having a child or his actuarial skills silently alienated him from his family and vice versa. Either way, retirement brings Schmidt face to face with his utterly boring existence and he can’t stand it.
While channel surfing, Schmidt happens upon one of those commercials asking you to adopt a child in a foreign country by donating only a few dollars each month. Schmidt calls the number and signs up for the program. The unsettling thing in this is that he seems to do so out of sheer boredom or curiosity rather than compassion.
Several times throughout the movie, Schmidt writes to his adopted African child, a boy named Ndugu. This results in lengthy voice-over monologues, in which Schmidt cynically relays his displeasure with whatever the current state of his life happens to be. It’s all sure to go straight over Ndugu’s head and I seriously have my doubts that any decent-minded person would read such tirades to a young child.
In the end though, I think I would have preferred to have been in Ndugu’s shoes. Seeing what Schmidt goes through and becomes during the course of this movie is both frustrating and discomforting. Yes, there may be an endearing moment now and then, but Schmidt only appears to change at the end of the film. Even then, we don’t really see how he’s changed or how much he continues to change his life after that moment. It’s an incomplete picture and the part which we can see is only beginning to look appealing.
The fact that this film runs just over two hours long makes it an exercise in endurance. Just how much of this guy can you tolerate? For those who enjoy or can handle dark humor and cynical wit, About Schmidt may only get a little bumpy. Anyone else may find this film to be exhausting and boring.
It’s not a train wreck though. Nicholson’s performance is very strong and he handles all the situations that get thrown his way with deft skill and precision. He never seems to break character and with a film like this, that’s an accomplishment. Nicholson never seems bored with the role. Rather, he immerses himself in it and pulls out all the stops you could imagine for a boring, Midwest member of the AARP generation. Nicholson gives Schmidt life, which makes the film’s climax all the more moving.
From suffering through his wife’s untimely death to traveling across the country, to try and prevent his daughter from marrying a dim-witted waterbed salesman, to receiving a letter that opens his eyes and changes his life, Nicholson makes Schmidt real. It’s a very boring and depressing kind of real, but for an actor not known to use a lot of restraint to create such a restrained and timid character is really impressive.
Nicholson’s performance saves the film. Had anyone but him been cast as Schmidt, this film would have been an utter failure. The supporting cast does a good job presenting dysfunctional and very real characters, but Nicholson is the rock of this film. Though About Schmidt makes for an interesting character study, there needs to be more than just one fantastic performance to make a movie something special.
RATING: 3 out of 5
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