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Thumbsucker
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Directed by Mike Mills
A high-school senior finds that fate (and modern medicine) plays some interesting tricks with his personality in this dramatic comedy. Justin Conn (Lou Taylor Pucci) is a neurotic teenager who has a difficult time with his peers, especially Rebecca (Kelli Garner), a cute girl in his debate class with whom he is somewhat mutually infatuated. It isn't much better at home with his obnoxious younger brother Joel (Chase Offerle), his father, Mike (Vincent D'Onofrio), who is busy having a midlife crisis, and mother Audrey (Tilda Swinton), who's infatuated with one of her favorite TV actors (Benjamin Bratt). All this anxiety has to go somewhere, and Justin's manifestation of his troubles comes in the form of sucking his thumb, which makes him even more of an outcast. Dr. Perry Lyman (Keanu Reeves), an orthodontist who seems to double as a new age therapist, treats Justin with hypnosis; meanwhile, the school psychologist decides he has Attention Deficit Disorder, and treats him with medication. Suddenly, Justin stops sucking his thumb and becomes an outgoing overachiever, single-handedly taking his school debate team to the state championship. But Justin's relationshop with his debate coach, Mr. Geary (Vince Vaughn), becomes strained, and the boy tries to mold yet another new identity for himself. Thumbsucker was the first feature film from Mike Mills, who previously distinguished himself in commercials and music videos. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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paulpaul FilmCouch #42
by paul in paul on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"What you should see but may not know is showing this weekend: Does Your Soul Have a Cold? by Mike Mills (Thumbsucker), a documentary about depression and the pharmaceutical invasion of Japan playing on IFC. [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog FilmCouch #42
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"What you should see but may not know is showing this weekend: Does Your Soul Have a Cold? by Mike Mills (Thumbsucker), a documentary about depression and the pharmaceutical invasion of Japan playing on IFC. [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog People at SXSW: Mike Mills (Doe ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Paul interviews Mike Mills (Thumbsucker) about his new documentary, Does Your Soul Have a Cold? Mills follows five Japanese people prescribed anti-depressants since a massive ad campaign launched in 1999 by American pharmaceutical companies led to a cultural shift in thinking about depression in Japan. [More]
ktincuktincu not as funny as you might think
by ktincu in ktincu Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"If you think a movie about a high school senior who sucks his thumb is going to be really funny, adjust your expectations a bit before watching Thumbsucker. While there are some very funny moments, the whole premise for the film--a misfit teenager with the most messed up dad around, and the second or third most messed up mom, and a so-called girlfriend who messes with him for her own fun--is really quite sad. Even his debate teacher, who you really want to be a bright spot in his life, is " [More]
indieabby88indieabby88 Re:Recasting THE BREAKFAST CLUB ...
by indieabby88 in Filmgaming
"Alright, let's take a stab at this thing, shall we? Channing Tatum (Stop-Loss) - Andrew Clark Lou Taylor Pucci (Thumbsucker) - Brian Ralph Johnson Charlie Hunnam (Green Street Hooligans)- John Bender< " [More]
paulpaul FilmCouch #42
by paul in FilmCouch
"What you should see but may not know is showing this weekend: Does Your Soul Have a Cold? by Mike Mills (Thumbsucker), a documentary about depression and the pharmaceutical invasion of Japan playing on IFC. [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
An almost perfectly balanced combination of real-life adolescent awkwardness and laugh-out-loud comedy, writer/director Mike Mills' Thumbsucker is an absolute success. Lou Taylor Pucci shines in his first leading role in a feature film with a performance that is nuanced, funny, and geared well for the camera. The young actor strikes a careful balance in his portrayal of Justin, so that while his screen-presence is compelling, his struggles still remain raw. The grace with which Pucci mixes the emotion and humor in the script can't be praised enough, as this is what keeps the potentially cumbersome subject matter of a 17-year-old thumbsucker from becoming too awkward for audiences to handle. It's only too easy to see how an actor with less charisma would have left audiences too uncomfortable to enjoy the film, while a run-of-the-mill cutie-pie couldn't possibly have done justice to such understated emotional material. Pucci's ability to pull us in with his tenderness and charm is what enables us to put ourselves in Justin's shoes: his imperfect relationship with his parents comes off as both strange and universal, and while his embarrassing fixation always seems potentially humiliating, it also feels analogous to any other coping mechanism, so it's never outside the viewer's scope of relating. The supporting cast also does a stellar job of injecting that highly necessary laughter, sarcasm, and perspective. Tilda Swinton and Vincent D'Onofrio evoke flawed but forgivable characters with the masterful skill we've come to expect from them, while Keanu Reeves approaches his role with such surprisingly self-effacing grace, you almost want to pat him on the back.Vince Vaughn takes his own road less traveled and reminds us of the subtlety that first landed him on the map, as he avoids the frat-pack comic style we've come to expect from him and keeps his performance as the eccentric high-school debate coach reeled in despite numerous opportunities to jump over the top. The beauty with which these actors engage in the poignant and infuriating tangle of their characters' relationships owes to more than just chemistry but also to an organic realism in the script itself. The resulting interplay combines the passion of an opera, the delicacy of a ballet, and the rawness of an unflinching documentary, turning what could easily have been a cringingly uncomfortable satire into something both beautiful and real. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide
 

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