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| Smart PeopleAs expected, smart supporting characters April 9,
 2008 3:43:20 PM 
|   Smart People
 |  Stories about addled, self-absorbed middle-aged male professors whose lives are falling apart and — worse yet — who can’t get published don’t mean much to the rest of us. Dennis Quaid’s Lawrence Wetherhold is a widowed lit prof with two kids (one worships him, the other hates him) and an unpublished tome about how illiterate everyone else is. Quaid jumps — or rather, slouches — fully into the character, but his misery is not something to make you want to break out the violins. Still, this film directed by Noam Murro from a script by Mark Poirier (both first-timers) adds something to the genre, with nuanced (and, yes, smart) supporting characters whose job it is to coddle and piss off Wetherhold — and eventually make him lovable. Ellen Page (Juno) stands out as the prof’s daughter, who acts as if she were his wife. Sarah Jessica Parker and Thomas Haden Church also pitch in. 95 minutes | Boston Common + Fenway + Harvard Square + Embassy + suburbs
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							 How Stepford politics rule Beacon Hill
  Why is it that one out of 125 Gloucester residents is a junkie?
  Boston TV kills A&E coverage
  Our correspondent takes a walk on the Wildlife-Removal side.
  Never mind its tough-girl alt-porn feminism: SuicideGirls has already moved on to a new generation
  Some Things at Trinity
 
				
					
					
							 What is driving the widespread movement pressuring Hillary to drop out, even though she is very much still in the race?
  How did BU's research facility go from slam dunk to almost sunk?
  Courage vs. abuse
  Style and substance, hold the meat
  Trying to find some meaning in ace biz-boy columnist Steve Bailey’s move to London
  How Stepford politics rule Beacon Hill
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												A Karate Kid ripoff 
												Faking it 
												Delivering the goods, especially if you like to watch a man submerged in acid 
												An urban fairy tale 
												Ain't nothin' but a paycheck 
												Repent 
												Unbearably grim 
												Meet Super Creep 
												Michael Caine remaking Michael Caine
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 | A copycat cop movieVegetation and goreAudrey Tautou goes slumming in Hors de prixUbiquitous Abigail Breslin in a mildly diverting adventureA plucky play that takes its eyes off the ballExploring the modern female lifeAn astonishingly unpredictable endingA plot centered around one man's penisPoetic Americana
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