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About Schmidt (2002)
In director Alexander Payne's existential character
study and nihilistic black comedy about a retired man seeking to
find meaning:
- 66 year-old Warren Schmidt (Oscar-nominated
Jack Nicholson) was a recently-retired Omaha, Nebraska insurance
actuary who viewed his entire life as disappointing - with the
opening shot of Schmidt in his barren, packed-up Woodmen Insurance
office waiting on his last day for 5 PM to approach before his
farewell retirement dinner
- he engaged in correspondence
with his "Childreach" adoptee
(delivered in voice-over soliloquies "Dear Ndugu...")
- an uncomprehending Tanzanian six year-old orphan named Ndugu
Umbo, sharing his feelings about his lack of accomplishments: ("...When
I was a kid, I used to think that maybe I was special, that somehow
Destiny would tap me to be a great man..."), and his suppressed
anger about his long-time supportive, but homely and overweight
wife Helen (June Squibb) after 42 years of marriage ("Who
is this old woman who lives in my house?")
- he expressed loathing for his prospective future
son-in-law - "nincompoop" waterbed salesman Randall Hertzel
(Dermot Mulroney): ("This guys just not up to snuff,
if you ask me. I mean, not for my little girl...")
- Warren discovered his wife dead
in the kitchen due to a stroke, and decided to take a
road trip in an oversized Adventurer R.V. to Denver to visit his
only child - mousy daughter Jeannie (Hope Davis)
- Warren delivered a regretful prayer atop his RV
- lit by candles - on a starry night to his deceased wife: ("Helen?
What did you really think of me, deep in your heart? Was I really
the man you wanted to be with? Was I? Or were you disappointed
and too nice to show it?")
- he met uninhibited, earthy
flirtatious divorcee (and the mother of the groom-to-be) Roberta
Hertzel (Oscar-nominated Kathy Bates) - during an infamous nude
hot-tub scene with the unwilling Schmidt, she hopped out of the
tub when she proposed: ("Here
we are, a divorcee and a widower. Sounds like a perfect match to
me")
- during the brilliant reception scene following the
wedding of his only daughter Jeannine (Hope Davis) to a "nincompoop" waterbed
salesman named Randall (Dermot Mulroney), Warren delivered
a speech and found some self-healing and consolation: ("Thank
you, to you, Randall, for taking such good care of my daughter
especially recently with our loss. Ever since I arrived here a
couple of days ago, I have so enjoyed getting to know Jeannie's
new family...Everybody else, terrific people. Terrific. And in
conclusion, I just want to say on this special day, this very special
day, that I am very pleased")
- he wrote a despairing last
letter to Ndugu after returning home from the Denver wedding: ("I
know we're all pretty small in the big scheme of things and I suppose
the most you can hope for is to make some kind of difference. But
what kind of difference have I made? What in the world is better
because of me?...I am weak and I am a failure. There's just no
getting around it. Relatively soon, I will die. Maybe in twenty
years, maybe tomorrow. It doesn't matter. Once I am dead and everyone
who knew me dies, too, it will be as though I never even existed.
What difference has my life made to anyone? None that I can think
of. None at all")
- and in the climactic catharsis when Warren received
his first letter back from Ndugu's missionary mother superior at
the orphanage with a drawing of Warren and Ndugu holding hands,
there was a closing close-up shot of a teary-eyed, elated Warren
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Warren's Last Day in Office
Warren's Prayer Atop RV
Wedding Reception Speech
Warren's Reaction to Letter from Adoptee
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