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Thank You for Smoking

Thank You for Smoking is a 2005 American satirical black comedy film written and directed by Jason Reitman and starring Aaron Eckhart, based on the 1994 satirical novel of the same name by Christopher Buckley. It follows the efforts of Big Tobacco's chief spokesman, Nick Naylor, who lobbies on behalf of cigarettes using heavy spin tactics while also trying to remain a role model for his 12-year-old son. Maria Bello, Adam Brody, Sam Elliott, Katie Holmes, Rob Lowe, William H. Macy, J. K. Simmons, and Robert Duvall appear in supporting roles.

Thank You for Smoking
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJason Reitman
Screenplay byJason Reitman
Based onThank You for Smoking
by Christopher Buckley
Produced byDavid O. Sacks
StarringAaron Eckhart
Maria Bello
Cameron Bright
Adam Brody
Sam Elliott
Katie Holmes
David Koechner
Rob Lowe
William H. Macy
J. K. Simmons
Robert Duvall
CinematographyJames Whitaker
Edited byDana E. Glauberman
Music byRolfe Kent
Production
companies
Room 9 Entertainment
ContentFilm
Distributed byFox Searchlight Pictures
Release dates
  • September 9, 2005 (2005-09-09) (TIFF)
  • March 17, 2006 (2006-03-17) (United States)
Running time
92 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$10 million[2]
Box office$39.3 million[1]

The film was released in a limited run on March 17, 2006, and had a wide release on April 14. It received largely positive reviews, with particular praise for its screenplay, humor, themes, and Eckhart's performance. As of 2007, the film had grossed a total of more than $39 million worldwide.[3] The film was released on DVD in the US on October 3, 2006, and in the UK on January 8, 2007.

Plot

Nick Naylor (Aaron Eckhart) is a Big Tobacco spokesman using "research" from an institution he's the vice-president of, a tobacco lobby called the "Academy of Tobacco Studies". It claims there is no link between tobacco and lung disease. Naylor and his friends, firearm lobbyist Bobby Jay Bliss (David Koechner) and alcohol lobbyist Polly Bailey (Maria Bello), meet every week and jokingly call themselves the "Merchants of Death" or "The MOD Squad". As anti-tobacco campaigns mount and numbers of young smokers decline, Naylor's boss, BR (J. K. Simmons), sends Naylor to Los Angeles to bargain for cigarette product placement in upcoming movies. Naylor takes along his young son, Joey (Cameron Bright), in hopes of bonding with him. The next day, Naylor is sent to meet with Lorne Lutch (Sam Elliott), the cancer-stricken man who once played the Marlboro Man in cigarette ads and is now campaigning against cigarettes. As his son watches, Naylor successfully offers Lutch a suitcase of money for his silence.

Senator Finistirre (William H. Macy), one of Naylor's most vehement critics, promotes a bill to add a skull and crossbones POISON warning to cigarette packaging. As Naylor is about to appear before a U.S. Senate committee to fight the bill, he is kidnapped by a clandestine group and covered in nicotine patches. Awakening in a hospital, he learns he has survived due to his high nicotine tolerance from heavy smoking, but he is now hypersensitive to nicotine and can never smoke again. Meanwhile, Naylor is seduced by a young reporter named Heather Holloway (Katie Holmes) into revealing secret information about his life and career. She makes it public via an exposé, criticizing his business activities and accusing him of training his son Joey to follow his amoral example. This results in negative PR for Naylor, which costs him his job.

Naylor tells the press about his affair with Holloway and promises to clear the names of everyone mentioned in her article. He then appears before the Senate committee, admitting to the dangers of smoking but arguing that public awareness is already high enough without extra warnings. He emphasizes consumer choice and responsibility and claims that if tobacco companies are guilty of tobacco-related deaths, then perhaps Finistirre's state of Vermont, as a major cheese producer, is likewise guilty of cholesterol-related deaths.

Although BR offers Naylor his old job again, Naylor rejects it as Big Tobacco is settling claims of liability. He also mentions Heather was humiliated upon being terminated by the paper for her article and has been reduced to a cub reporter handling weather on a local news station. Naylor supports his son's newfound interest in debating and opens a private lobbying firm. The MOD squad continues to meet with new members that represent the fast-food, oil, and biohazard industries. Now Naylor runs an agency called Naylor Strategic Relations and consults cellphone industry representatives concerned about claims that cellphones cause brain cancer, he narrates: "Michael Jordan plays ball. Charles Manson kills people. I talk. Everyone has a talent."

Cast

Director Jason Reitman asked many of his prospective actors and actresses to be in the film by writing each of them a personal letter. Every one of his first choices accepted his or her part and most thanked Reitman for his letter. Reitman was also able to persuade Eckhart, Holmes, Macy, and Lowe to sign on to the film with minimum pay.[4]

Production

Mel Gibson's Icon Productions bought the rights to Buckley's novel before its release. Initially, Gibson saw himself as starring as Nick Naylor in the adaptation.[2] However, the satiric nature of the book meant the studio lacked a way to film it and the project lacked a usable script.[5] Reitman became interested in heading an adaptation after reading the book, and independently wrote a draft for Icon executives after he discovered they owned the rights to the film. Reitman saw himself as a comic writer with a voice similar to Buckley's, and consciously attempted to maintain the satiric flavor of the book for his draft.[6] The script was received favorably by Icon, and Gibson called Reitman to tell him how much he loved it.[2] But over the next three years, the project languished because of a lack of financing and big studio interest, as most studios wanted Reitman to rewrite his script to include a more anti-smoking and uplifting ending. According to Reitman, studios wanted Naylor to have a change of heart by the film's end and repent for his past.[4]

It was only after meeting David O. Sacks, who had made his fortune as the former COO of the Internet payment company PayPal, that Reitman found a financier for his script. A first-time producer, Sacks spent over a year trying to acquire the rights to the film from Icon. He financed most of the film's $8.5 million budget and let Reitman keep most of his original draft.[2] The project marked Reitman's first feature-length film as a director, though he previously directed short films and commercials and had worked on the set of his father, director Ivan Reitman.

During the filming, Reitman made the conscious decision not to show any actual smoking of cigarettes. The only scenes that include smoking are older films the characters watch, such as when John Wayne lights up in Sands of Iwo Jima.

Before the film was screened at the Sundance Film Festival, internet rumors claimed that an extended nudity scene between Eckhart and Holmes had been cut down after pressure from Holmes' husband, Tom Cruise. Reitman and executives denied that such a scene had ever existed but welcomed the publicity it garnered for the film. Reitman later said that "Half the questions that I've been getting are thoughtful questions about the moral of lobbying and how does satire work. And the rest is just, 'Is there actually any nude footage out there?'"[7]

Controversy also arose after the film was screened at the Toronto Film Festival. Thank You for Smoking was met with tremendous popular reception and afterward disputed claims emerged as to who had signed a distribution deal with Sacks. Fox Searchlight Pictures and Paramount Classics both issued competing press releases claiming that they had secured rights for the film's distribution. Sacks later claimed that he never reached a firm deal with Paramount, and noted that Fox Searchlight had offered $7 million for distribution, while Paramount Classics offered $6.7 million. Allegedly, Sacks called Paramount at 1:15 a.m. saying he was uncomfortable with their initial deal. Ruth Vitale, co-president of Paramount Classics said "He can't resell the film" and noted "I can only think that because of his naiveté and inexperience he would do this."[2]

Serial entrepreneur Elon Musk is credited as Executive Producer of Thank You for Smoking. His participation was discussed during episode #1470[8] of the Joe Rogan Experience podcast with Musk as Rogan’s guest. It was also discussed during episode #49[9] of Lex Fridman's podcast.

Other members of the tight-knit and influential "PayPal Mafia" credited alongside Sacks and Musk as Executive Producers are Max Levchin and Peter Thiel (the Mafia's "don").[10]

Release

Critical reception

The film received mostly positive reviews from film critics. Film-review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 86% of 182 critics have given the film a positive review, with a rating average of 7.32/10. The site's general consensus is that "Loaded with delightfully unscrupulous characters and a witty, cynical script, Thank You For Smoking is a sharp satire with a brilliantly smarmy lead performance from Aaron Eckhart."[11] Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from film critics, has a rating score of 71 based on 36 reviews.[12] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone describing it as "acutely hilarious" and gave the film 3.5 out of 4 stars.[13] USA Today film critic Claudia Puig called it a "razor-sharp satire" that was "the wittiest dark comedy of the year thus far. It has appeal to all sides of the political spectrum." She praised the film for a "quirky and intelligent rarity that elicits wry smiles and hearty laughs alike" and compared it in tone to Election (1999).[14] Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times also favorably reviewed the film, calling it a "very smart and funny movie" that had been "shrewdly" adapted to film from novel.[5]

Box office performance

Thank You for Smoking initially opened at the box office in the U.S. as a limited release in just five theaters, and grossed $262,923 in its debut weekend for an average of $52,584 per theater, making it one of the top 100 average gross per theater films of all time. The film was later released in 1,015 theaters across the U.S. on April 14, 2006, and has gone on to gross $24,793,509 domestically and $14,529,518 outside the country, for a total of $39,323,027 worldwide. The highest it ever rated at the North American box office was #8 on the weekend of its wide release.[15] Although the film's box office performance was excellent for Reitman's directorial debut, it paled in comparison with his next two films, Juno and Up in the Air, both of which made well over $150,000,000 worldwide.[16] As of 2017, the movie is the 14th highest-grossing political satire film.[3]

Criticism

The main contention most critics had with the film was its lack of continuity. Karina Longworth of Cinematical notes "Thank You for Smoking has a vague emotional arc, but narratively it plays out like a constellation of sitcom sketches, connected by the most tenuous threads of character evolution",[17] while Empire observes "the problem's not so much with the movie's aim, as with the number of targets it's aiming at."[18] Other reviewers criticized the film's overacting. Manohla Dargis of The New York Times notes "although he [Reitman] steers his cast through its paces with facility, he tends to oversell jokes that were already plenty loud in the book."[19] The Hollywood Reporter wrote "While often entertaining, the film keeps hitting the same comic notes",[20] and Salon said, "The actors here are entertaining enough to watch, even if they sometimes seem to be taking their mission (whatever they think it is) a bit too seriously."[21]

The Nick Naylor character has been compared to real-life Richard Berman of the Center for Consumer Freedom.[22]

While Thank You for Smoking the book was praised as a sharp criticism of both anti-smoking lobbyists and the tobacco industry, the film has received more mixed reviews on its satirical content. Steve Palopoli of Metro Silicon Valley writes that "no matter" how much the hype machine might hard-sell the idea that the movie 'skewers both sides of the issue', "any child old enough to recognize Joe Camel can tell that underneath the sarcastic joking, this is a bitterly anti-smoking film."[23] Palopoli goes on to say "the supposed case against the anti-smoking lobby has been reduced mostly to some limp jokes at the expense of William H. Macy's senator character, who is fervently against the tobacco lobby". Many felt the film's relatively sappy ending negated the slicker, darker tone of the book. The Washington Post's Desson Thomson thought that "as written and directed by Jason Reitman, 'Smoking' is filtered too heavily with moral redemption."[24]

Reitman has maintained his purpose was to match the tone and satirical message of the book as closely as possible. "What I wanted people to think about was political correctness. I wanted them to think about ideas of personal responsibility and personal choice. I think cigarettes are a wonderful location for that discussion because cigarettes are something we know all the answers to", he posits. "I wanted to look into this idea of why we feel the need to tell each other how to live and why we can't take personal responsibility for our own actions when we fall ill from things that we know are dangerous."[25] Stephanie Zacharek of Salon agreed with Reitman, saying "Despite its title, the movie doesn't come packaged with a strong anti-smoking message, because it doesn't need to: Everyone knows that smoking is bad for you, including people who continue to do it."[21]

There is no point during the film at which any of the characters smoke. Dargis of The New York Times unwittingly states, "Thank You for Smoking is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). It includes mild violence, discreet sex and, of course, countless cigarettes."[19] In the film, even Robert Duvall's filtered cigarette maverick "The Captain" is shown repeatedly drinking mint juleps rather than smoking cigarettes. Some critics argue that Reitman's reluctance to show the characters smoking is further confirmation of the film's anti-smoking stance. Reitman has issued statements disagreeing with this view. He said in an interview that "While it's not anti-smoking, it's very important people don't think that this is a pro-smoking movie. It's about freedom of choice."[26] Buckley said about the decision to omit smoking that "[I]t was very deliberate, and I think rather cool."[27]

Industry reaction

The tobacco industry itself has been reluctant to take any sides or comment on the film. When New York Times reporter Michael Jankowsky contacted an Altria publicist about the tobacco giant's reaction, she "hesitated to respond, insisting that the film looks dated and poorly reflects the industry with depictions of tobacco executives as highly paid sleazeballs."[28] Though Thank You for Smoking pokes fun at the industry, the novel it was adapted from is a much harsher critic of tobacco lobbyists, and the major tobacco companies have mostly kept quiet on the issue.

Accolades

Thank You for Smoking did not receive a wide variety of nominations from the major award circuits; however, it did garner two Golden Globe nominations in its year for Best Picture (Musical or Comedy) and Best Actor in the same film genre for Aaron Eckhart's portrayal of Nick Naylor.[29] The Broadcast Film Critics Association recognized Cameron Bright for his performance as Joey with a nomination for Best Young Actor, and also gave the film itself a nomination in the Comedy category.[30] Jason Reitman received the Best Directorial Debut award from the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures.[31]

Soundtrack

Thank You for Smoking (Music from the Motion Picture)
Soundtrack album by
Various artists
ReleasedApril 18, 2006
RecordedVarious times
GenreSoundtrack
Length38:02
LabelLakeshore Records
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic     [32]

The Thank You for Smoking soundtrack was released April 14, 2006, and the CD came out on April 18, 2006. The first nine tracks are popular songs about smoking taken from the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s. The famous track "Smoke! Smoke! Smoke! (That Cigarette)" opens the film. The final four tracks are instrumentals from the original score of Rolfe Kent, who had been nominated for best original score for his work on Sideways. AllMusic wrote that "The thread is obvious, but the selections sound handpicked rather than researched solely on the basis of their subject matter." Other critics have called the soundtrack "demented."[33]

  1. "Smoke! Smoke! Smoke! (That Cigarette)" (Tex Williams) – 2:54
  2. "Smoke Rings" (The Mills Brothers) – 2:55
  3. "Greenback Dollar" (The Kingston Trio) – 2:52
  4. "Little Organ Fugue" (The Swingle Singers) – 2:23
  5. "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" (The Platters) – 2:40
  6. "Three Cigarettes in an Ashtray" (Patsy Cline) – 2:16
  7. "Cigarettes and Whisky" (Ramblin' Jack Elliott) – 2:02
  8. "Cigarettes and Coffee" (Otis Redding) – 3:52
  9. "Another Puff" (Jerry Reed) – 4:06
  10. "Intro & Tobacco One" (Rolfe Kent) – 3:02
  11. "Donate It & Sex Back in Cigarettes" (Rolfe Kent) – 3:01
  12. "Joey & Drums of Doom" (Rolfe Kent) – 2:59
  13. "Spanish Epilogue Revisited" (Rolfe Kent) – 3:00
  14. "Wind of Change" (Scorpions) – 5:11

Home media

The DVD was released on October 3, 2006, by 20th Century Fox, with both a widescreen and fullscreen edition. Each DVD contains two commentaries, one exclusively with Reitman and another with Reitman, Eckhart, and Koechner. Other extras include thirteen deleted scenes, a Charlie Rose interview, a making-of featurette, an "America: Living in Spin" featurette, a poster gallery, and an art gallery. The film has not yet been released on Blu-ray.

Proposed television series

Variety reported on November 24, 2006, that NBC planned to create a television series based on the film.[34] Sacks headed the adaptation as executive producer, with Rick Cleveland attached as head writer. After NBC passed on the project, it was brought to NBC's cable network, USA. James Dodson was set up as head writer as well as co-executive producer alongside Sacks. USA's chief programming executive Jeff Wachtel initially described the character as living between the morally ambiguous character of the film and Robin Hood.[35] The series planned to adopt a different title and sought to start where the movie left off. The project never materialized and no official series of the movie has since developed. However, ABC's show Better Off Ted has been described as a "TV-sized version of Thank You for Smoking".[36]

References

  1. ^ a b "Thank You for Smoking". Boxofficemojo.com. Retrieved October 5, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e Waxman, Sharon (September 10, 2006). "The Son Also Directs". The New York Times. pp. B9. Retrieved April 25, 2006.
  3. ^ a b "Weekend Box Office". BoxOfficeMojo.com. Retrieved May 7, 2006.
  4. ^ a b Sutherland, Claire (August 31, 2006). "Reitman smokes out studio". Herald Sun (Australia). pp. I18.
  5. ^ a b Turan, Kenneth (March 17, 2006). "Thank You for Smoking". Los Angeles Times.
  6. ^ Harrison, Eric (March 30, 2006). "Taking on Tobacco". The Houston Chronicle. p. 10.
  7. ^ Rea, Steven (March 19, 2006). "He'll take publicity—good, off-the-wall—thanks much". The Philadelphia Inquirer. pp. H02.
  8. ^ "Joe Rogan Experience #1470 – Elon Musk". YouTube. May 7, 2020. 1:36:15. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021.
  9. ^ "Elon Musk: Neuralink, AI, Autopilot, and the Pale Blue Dot | Lex Fridman Podcast #49". November 12, 2019. 8:45. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  10. ^ "Transcript - Slate Money Goes to the Movies: Thank You for Smoking". slate.com. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  11. ^ "Thank You for Smoking (2006)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
  12. ^ "Thank You for Smoking (2006): Reviews". Metacritic. CNET Networks. Retrieved December 25, 2009.
  13. ^ Travers, Peter (March 7, 2006). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on January 7, 2007.
  14. ^ Puig, Claudia (March 16, 2006). "'Thank You for Smoking' is a breath of fresh air". USA Today.
  15. ^ "Box Office Mojo: 'Thank You for Smoking'". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  16. ^ "The Numbers: 'Jason Reitman'". The Numbers. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  17. ^ Longworth, Karina (January 22, 2006). . Cinematical. Archived from the original on February 20, 2006.
  18. ^ Jolin, Dan (May 26, 2006). "Thank You For Smoking". Empire. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  19. ^ a b Dargis, Manohla (March 17, 2006). "Thank You for Smoking (2005)". New York Times.
  20. ^ . The Hollywood Reporter. December 27, 2005. Archived from the original on April 18, 2007.
  21. ^ a b Zacharek, Stephanie (March 17, 2006). "Thank You for Smoking". Salon.com.
  22. ^ O'Brien, Dennis (October 6, 2006). . The Baltimore Sun. Archived from the original on January 11, 2012. Retrieved March 14, 2018. But even some critics concede that [Richard Berman] can be charming — they compare him loosely with Nick Naylor, the lead character and spokesman for the tobacco industry in the movie Thank You for Smoking.
  23. ^ Palopoli, Steve (March 29, 2006). . Metro Silicon Valley. Archived from the original on October 17, 2006.
  24. ^ Thomson, Desson. . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on November 10, 2012. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  25. ^ . abc.net.au. August 16, 2006. Archived from the original on March 6, 2007.
  26. ^ Axmaker, Sean (March 28, 2006). "'Smoking' director bucked trends for political satire". Seattle Post Intelligencer.
  27. ^ Bosman, Julie (March 10, 2006). "For Tobacco, Stealth Marketing is the Norm". The New York Times. pp. C4. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  28. ^ Jankowsky, Michael (April 2, 2006). "Thank You For O.K.'ing Addiction". New York Times. pp. A4. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  29. ^ "64th Golden Globe Awards Nominations". www.goldenglobes.com. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  30. ^ "THANK YOU FOR SMOKING In the Awards Spotlight". Searchlight Pictures. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  31. ^ "2006 Archives". National Board of Review. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  32. ^ Monger, James Christopher. "Thank You for Smoking Original Soundtrack review". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
  33. ^ Braun, Liz (March 24, 2006). "Smoke Screen; Film's Dark Humour Brilliantly Enlightens Us on the Art of Spin". The Toronto Sun. pp. E8.
  34. ^ . Zap2It.com. Archived from the original on December 7, 2006. Retrieved November 24, 2006.
  35. ^ Adalian, Josef (October 7, 2007). "USA lights 'Smoking' spinoff". Variety.
  36. ^ Deggans, Eric (February 22, 2009). "Networks Missing the Mark". Tampa Bay Times. pp. 2E. Retrieved October 9, 2022.

External links

thank, smoking, this, article, about, film, novel, based, upon, novel, 2005, american, satirical, black, comedy, film, written, directed, jason, reitman, starring, aaron, eckhart, based, 1994, satirical, novel, same, name, christopher, buckley, follows, effort. This article is about the film For the novel it is based upon see Thank You for Smoking novel Thank You for Smoking is a 2005 American satirical black comedy film written and directed by Jason Reitman and starring Aaron Eckhart based on the 1994 satirical novel of the same name by Christopher Buckley It follows the efforts of Big Tobacco s chief spokesman Nick Naylor who lobbies on behalf of cigarettes using heavy spin tactics while also trying to remain a role model for his 12 year old son Maria Bello Adam Brody Sam Elliott Katie Holmes Rob Lowe William H Macy J K Simmons and Robert Duvall appear in supporting roles Thank You for SmokingTheatrical release posterDirected byJason ReitmanScreenplay byJason ReitmanBased onThank You for Smokingby Christopher BuckleyProduced byDavid O SacksStarringAaron EckhartMaria BelloCameron BrightAdam BrodySam ElliottKatie HolmesDavid KoechnerRob LoweWilliam H MacyJ K SimmonsRobert DuvallCinematographyJames WhitakerEdited byDana E GlaubermanMusic byRolfe KentProductioncompaniesRoom 9 EntertainmentContentFilmDistributed byFox Searchlight PicturesRelease datesSeptember 9 2005 2005 09 09 TIFF March 17 2006 2006 03 17 United States Running time92 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 10 million 2 Box office 39 3 million 1 The film was released in a limited run on March 17 2006 and had a wide release on April 14 It received largely positive reviews with particular praise for its screenplay humor themes and Eckhart s performance As of 2007 the film had grossed a total of more than 39 million worldwide 3 The film was released on DVD in the US on October 3 2006 and in the UK on January 8 2007 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 4 1 Critical reception 4 2 Box office performance 4 3 Criticism 4 4 Industry reaction 4 5 Accolades 5 Soundtrack 6 Home media 7 Proposed television series 8 References 9 External linksPlot EditNick Naylor Aaron Eckhart is a Big Tobacco spokesman using research from an institution he s the vice president of a tobacco lobby called the Academy of Tobacco Studies It claims there is no link between tobacco and lung disease Naylor and his friends firearm lobbyist Bobby Jay Bliss David Koechner and alcohol lobbyist Polly Bailey Maria Bello meet every week and jokingly call themselves the Merchants of Death or The MOD Squad As anti tobacco campaigns mount and numbers of young smokers decline Naylor s boss BR J K Simmons sends Naylor to Los Angeles to bargain for cigarette product placement in upcoming movies Naylor takes along his young son Joey Cameron Bright in hopes of bonding with him The next day Naylor is sent to meet with Lorne Lutch Sam Elliott the cancer stricken man who once played the Marlboro Man in cigarette ads and is now campaigning against cigarettes As his son watches Naylor successfully offers Lutch a suitcase of money for his silence Senator Finistirre William H Macy one of Naylor s most vehement critics promotes a bill to add a skull and crossbones POISON warning to cigarette packaging As Naylor is about to appear before a U S Senate committee to fight the bill he is kidnapped by a clandestine group and covered in nicotine patches Awakening in a hospital he learns he has survived due to his high nicotine tolerance from heavy smoking but he is now hypersensitive to nicotine and can never smoke again Meanwhile Naylor is seduced by a young reporter named Heather Holloway Katie Holmes into revealing secret information about his life and career She makes it public via an expose criticizing his business activities and accusing him of training his son Joey to follow his amoral example This results in negative PR for Naylor which costs him his job Naylor tells the press about his affair with Holloway and promises to clear the names of everyone mentioned in her article He then appears before the Senate committee admitting to the dangers of smoking but arguing that public awareness is already high enough without extra warnings He emphasizes consumer choice and responsibility and claims that if tobacco companies are guilty of tobacco related deaths then perhaps Finistirre s state of Vermont as a major cheese producer is likewise guilty of cholesterol related deaths Although BR offers Naylor his old job again Naylor rejects it as Big Tobacco is settling claims of liability He also mentions Heather was humiliated upon being terminated by the paper for her article and has been reduced to a cub reporter handling weather on a local news station Naylor supports his son s newfound interest in debating and opens a private lobbying firm The MOD squad continues to meet with new members that represent the fast food oil and biohazard industries Now Naylor runs an agency called Naylor Strategic Relations and consults cellphone industry representatives concerned about claims that cellphones cause brain cancer he narrates Michael Jordan plays ball Charles Manson kills people I talk Everyone has a talent Cast EditAaron Eckhart as Nick Naylor Spokesman For The Academy of Tobacco Studies Cameron Bright as Joey Naylor Nick s Son Katie Holmes as Heather Holloway Reporter For The Washington Probe Maria Bello as Polly Bailey Spokeswoman For The Alcohol Industry David Koechner as Bobby Jay Bliss Spokesman For S A F E T Y Society for the Advancement of Firearms and Effective Training for Youth William H Macy as Senator Ortolan Finistirre Robert Duvall as the Captain Founder of The Academy for Tobacco Studies J K Simmons as B R Nick s Boss Marianne Muellerleile as Joey s School Teacher Kim Dickens as Jill Naylor Nick s Ex Wife Rob Lowe as Jeff Megall Hollywood Super Agent Adam Brody as Jack Jeff Megall s Assistant Sam Elliott as Lorne Lutch The Original Marlboro Man Todd Louiso as Ron Goode Connie Ray as Pearl Dennis Miller as Himself Melora Hardin as Interviewer Daniel Travis as Brad Jill s Current PartnerDirector Jason Reitman asked many of his prospective actors and actresses to be in the film by writing each of them a personal letter Every one of his first choices accepted his or her part and most thanked Reitman for his letter Reitman was also able to persuade Eckhart Holmes Macy and Lowe to sign on to the film with minimum pay 4 Production EditMel Gibson s Icon Productions bought the rights to Buckley s novel before its release Initially Gibson saw himself as starring as Nick Naylor in the adaptation 2 However the satiric nature of the book meant the studio lacked a way to film it and the project lacked a usable script 5 Reitman became interested in heading an adaptation after reading the book and independently wrote a draft for Icon executives after he discovered they owned the rights to the film Reitman saw himself as a comic writer with a voice similar to Buckley s and consciously attempted to maintain the satiric flavor of the book for his draft 6 The script was received favorably by Icon and Gibson called Reitman to tell him how much he loved it 2 But over the next three years the project languished because of a lack of financing and big studio interest as most studios wanted Reitman to rewrite his script to include a more anti smoking and uplifting ending According to Reitman studios wanted Naylor to have a change of heart by the film s end and repent for his past 4 It was only after meeting David O Sacks who had made his fortune as the former COO of the Internet payment company PayPal that Reitman found a financier for his script A first time producer Sacks spent over a year trying to acquire the rights to the film from Icon He financed most of the film s 8 5 million budget and let Reitman keep most of his original draft 2 The project marked Reitman s first feature length film as a director though he previously directed short films and commercials and had worked on the set of his father director Ivan Reitman During the filming Reitman made the conscious decision not to show any actual smoking of cigarettes The only scenes that include smoking are older films the characters watch such as when John Wayne lights up in Sands of Iwo Jima Before the film was screened at the Sundance Film Festival internet rumors claimed that an extended nudity scene between Eckhart and Holmes had been cut down after pressure from Holmes husband Tom Cruise Reitman and executives denied that such a scene had ever existed but welcomed the publicity it garnered for the film Reitman later said that Half the questions that I ve been getting are thoughtful questions about the moral of lobbying and how does satire work And the rest is just Is there actually any nude footage out there 7 Controversy also arose after the film was screened at the Toronto Film Festival Thank You for Smoking was met with tremendous popular reception and afterward disputed claims emerged as to who had signed a distribution deal with Sacks Fox Searchlight Pictures and Paramount Classics both issued competing press releases claiming that they had secured rights for the film s distribution Sacks later claimed that he never reached a firm deal with Paramount and noted that Fox Searchlight had offered 7 million for distribution while Paramount Classics offered 6 7 million Allegedly Sacks called Paramount at 1 15 a m saying he was uncomfortable with their initial deal Ruth Vitale co president of Paramount Classics said He can t resell the film and noted I can only think that because of his naivete and inexperience he would do this 2 Serial entrepreneur Elon Musk is credited as Executive Producer of Thank You for Smoking His participation was discussed during episode 1470 8 of the Joe Rogan Experience podcast with Musk as Rogan s guest It was also discussed during episode 49 9 of Lex Fridman s podcast Other members of the tight knit and influential PayPal Mafia credited alongside Sacks and Musk as Executive Producers are Max Levchin and Peter Thiel the Mafia s don 10 Release EditCritical reception Edit The film received mostly positive reviews from film critics Film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 86 of 182 critics have given the film a positive review with a rating average of 7 32 10 The site s general consensus is that Loaded with delightfully unscrupulous characters and a witty cynical script Thank You For Smoking is a sharp satire with a brilliantly smarmy lead performance from Aaron Eckhart 11 Metacritic which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from film critics has a rating score of 71 based on 36 reviews 12 Peter Travers of Rolling Stone describing it as acutely hilarious and gave the film 3 5 out of 4 stars 13 USA Today film critic Claudia Puig called it a razor sharp satire that was the wittiest dark comedy of the year thus far It has appeal to all sides of the political spectrum She praised the film for a quirky and intelligent rarity that elicits wry smiles and hearty laughs alike and compared it in tone to Election 1999 14 Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times also favorably reviewed the film calling it a very smart and funny movie that had been shrewdly adapted to film from novel 5 Box office performance Edit Thank You for Smoking initially opened at the box office in the U S as a limited release in just five theaters and grossed 262 923 in its debut weekend for an average of 52 584 per theater making it one of the top 100 average gross per theater films of all time The film was later released in 1 015 theaters across the U S on April 14 2006 and has gone on to gross 24 793 509 domestically and 14 529 518 outside the country for a total of 39 323 027 worldwide The highest it ever rated at the North American box office was 8 on the weekend of its wide release 15 Although the film s box office performance was excellent for Reitman s directorial debut it paled in comparison with his next two films Juno and Up in the Air both of which made well over 150 000 000 worldwide 16 As of 2017 the movie is the 14th highest grossing political satire film 3 Criticism Edit The main contention most critics had with the film was its lack of continuity Karina Longworth of Cinematical notes Thank You for Smoking has a vague emotional arc but narratively it plays out like a constellation of sitcom sketches connected by the most tenuous threads of character evolution 17 while Empire observes the problem s not so much with the movie s aim as with the number of targets it s aiming at 18 Other reviewers criticized the film s overacting Manohla Dargis of The New York Times notes although he Reitman steers his cast through its paces with facility he tends to oversell jokes that were already plenty loud in the book 19 The Hollywood Reporter wrote While often entertaining the film keeps hitting the same comic notes 20 and Salon said The actors here are entertaining enough to watch even if they sometimes seem to be taking their mission whatever they think it is a bit too seriously 21 The Nick Naylor character has been compared to real life Richard Berman of the Center for Consumer Freedom 22 While Thank You for Smoking the book was praised as a sharp criticism of both anti smoking lobbyists and the tobacco industry the film has received more mixed reviews on its satirical content Steve Palopoli of Metro Silicon Valley writes that no matter how much the hype machine might hard sell the idea that the movie skewers both sides of the issue any child old enough to recognize Joe Camel can tell that underneath the sarcastic joking this is a bitterly anti smoking film 23 Palopoli goes on to say the supposed case against the anti smoking lobby has been reduced mostly to some limp jokes at the expense of William H Macy s senator character who is fervently against the tobacco lobby Many felt the film s relatively sappy ending negated the slicker darker tone of the book The Washington Post s Desson Thomson thought that as written and directed by Jason Reitman Smoking is filtered too heavily with moral redemption 24 Reitman has maintained his purpose was to match the tone and satirical message of the book as closely as possible What I wanted people to think about was political correctness I wanted them to think about ideas of personal responsibility and personal choice I think cigarettes are a wonderful location for that discussion because cigarettes are something we know all the answers to he posits I wanted to look into this idea of why we feel the need to tell each other how to live and why we can t take personal responsibility for our own actions when we fall ill from things that we know are dangerous 25 Stephanie Zacharek of Salon agreed with Reitman saying Despite its title the movie doesn t come packaged with a strong anti smoking message because it doesn t need to Everyone knows that smoking is bad for you including people who continue to do it 21 There is no point during the film at which any of the characters smoke Dargis of The New York Times unwittingly states Thank You for Smoking is rated R Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian It includes mild violence discreet sex and of course countless cigarettes 19 In the film even Robert Duvall s filtered cigarette maverick The Captain is shown repeatedly drinking mint juleps rather than smoking cigarettes Some critics argue that Reitman s reluctance to show the characters smoking is further confirmation of the film s anti smoking stance Reitman has issued statements disagreeing with this view He said in an interview that While it s not anti smoking it s very important people don t think that this is a pro smoking movie It s about freedom of choice 26 Buckley said about the decision to omit smoking that I t was very deliberate and I think rather cool 27 Industry reaction Edit The tobacco industry itself has been reluctant to take any sides or comment on the film When New York Times reporter Michael Jankowsky contacted an Altria publicist about the tobacco giant s reaction she hesitated to respond insisting that the film looks dated and poorly reflects the industry with depictions of tobacco executives as highly paid sleazeballs 28 Though Thank You for Smoking pokes fun at the industry the novel it was adapted from is a much harsher critic of tobacco lobbyists and the major tobacco companies have mostly kept quiet on the issue Accolades Edit Thank You for Smoking did not receive a wide variety of nominations from the major award circuits however it did garner two Golden Globe nominations in its year for Best Picture Musical or Comedy and Best Actor in the same film genre for Aaron Eckhart s portrayal of Nick Naylor 29 The Broadcast Film Critics Association recognized Cameron Bright for his performance as Joey with a nomination for Best Young Actor and also gave the film itself a nomination in the Comedy category 30 Jason Reitman received the Best Directorial Debut award from the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures 31 Soundtrack EditThank You for Smoking Music from the Motion Picture Soundtrack album by Various artistsReleasedApril 18 2006RecordedVarious timesGenreSoundtrackLength38 02LabelLakeshore RecordsProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllmusic 32 The Thank You for Smoking soundtrack was released April 14 2006 and the CD came out on April 18 2006 The first nine tracks are popular songs about smoking taken from the 1940s 1950s and 1960s The famous track Smoke Smoke Smoke That Cigarette opens the film The final four tracks are instrumentals from the original score of Rolfe Kent who had been nominated for best original score for his work on Sideways AllMusic wrote that The thread is obvious but the selections sound handpicked rather than researched solely on the basis of their subject matter Other critics have called the soundtrack demented 33 Smoke Smoke Smoke That Cigarette Tex Williams 2 54 Smoke Rings The Mills Brothers 2 55 Greenback Dollar The Kingston Trio 2 52 Little Organ Fugue The Swingle Singers 2 23 Smoke Gets in Your Eyes The Platters 2 40 Three Cigarettes in an Ashtray Patsy Cline 2 16 Cigarettes and Whisky Ramblin Jack Elliott 2 02 Cigarettes and Coffee Otis Redding 3 52 Another Puff Jerry Reed 4 06 Intro amp Tobacco One Rolfe Kent 3 02 Donate It amp Sex Back in Cigarettes Rolfe Kent 3 01 Joey amp Drums of Doom Rolfe Kent 2 59 Spanish Epilogue Revisited Rolfe Kent 3 00 Wind of Change Scorpions 5 11Home media EditThe DVD was released on October 3 2006 by 20th Century Fox with both a widescreen and fullscreen edition Each DVD contains two commentaries one exclusively with Reitman and another with Reitman Eckhart and Koechner Other extras include thirteen deleted scenes a Charlie Rose interview a making of featurette an America Living in Spin featurette a poster gallery and an art gallery The film has not yet been released on Blu ray Proposed television series EditVariety reported on November 24 2006 that NBC planned to create a television series based on the film 34 Sacks headed the adaptation as executive producer with Rick Cleveland attached as head writer After NBC passed on the project it was brought to NBC s cable network USA James Dodson was set up as head writer as well as co executive producer alongside Sacks USA s chief programming executive Jeff Wachtel initially described the character as living between the morally ambiguous character of the film and Robin Hood 35 The series planned to adopt a different title and sought to start where the movie left off The project never materialized and no official series of the movie has since developed However ABC s show Better Off Ted has been described as a TV sized version of Thank You for Smoking 36 References Edit a b Thank You for Smoking Boxofficemojo com Retrieved October 5 2017 a b c d e Waxman Sharon September 10 2006 The Son Also Directs The New York Times pp B9 Retrieved April 25 2006 a b Weekend Box Office BoxOfficeMojo com Retrieved May 7 2006 a b Sutherland Claire August 31 2006 Reitman smokes out studio Herald Sun Australia pp I18 a b Turan Kenneth March 17 2006 Thank You for Smoking Los Angeles Times Harrison Eric March 30 2006 Taking on Tobacco The Houston Chronicle p 10 Rea Steven March 19 2006 He ll take publicity good off the wall thanks much The Philadelphia Inquirer pp H02 Joe Rogan Experience 1470 Elon Musk YouTube May 7 2020 1 36 15 Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Elon Musk Neuralink AI Autopilot and the Pale Blue Dot Lex Fridman Podcast 49 November 12 2019 8 45 Retrieved November 12 2019 Transcript Slate Money Goes to the Movies Thank You for Smoking slate com Retrieved October 9 2022 Thank You for Smoking 2006 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved October 1 2020 Thank You for Smoking 2006 Reviews Metacritic CNET Networks Retrieved December 25 2009 Travers Peter March 7 2006 Thank You for Smoking review Rolling Stone Archived from the original on January 7 2007 Puig Claudia March 16 2006 Thank You for Smoking is a breath of fresh air USA Today Box Office Mojo Thank You for Smoking Box Office Mojo Retrieved April 28 2010 The Numbers Jason Reitman The Numbers Retrieved April 28 2010 Longworth Karina January 22 2006 Sundance Review Thank You For Smoking Cinematical Archived from the original on February 20 2006 Jolin Dan May 26 2006 Thank You For Smoking Empire Retrieved April 28 2010 a b Dargis Manohla March 17 2006 Thank You for Smoking 2005 New York Times Thank You for Smoking The Hollywood Reporter December 27 2005 Archived from the original on April 18 2007 a b Zacharek Stephanie March 17 2006 Thank You for Smoking Salon com O Brien Dennis October 6 2006 Standing up for the big guys The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on January 11 2012 Retrieved March 14 2018 But even some critics concede that Richard Berman can be charming they compare him loosely with Nick Naylor the lead character and spokesman for the tobacco industry in the movie Thank You for Smoking Palopoli Steve March 29 2006 The New Insincerity Metro Silicon Valley Archived from the original on October 17 2006 Thomson Desson Thank You for Smoking The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 10 2012 Retrieved April 28 2010 Thank You For Smoking Interview abc net au August 16 2006 Archived from the original on March 6 2007 Axmaker Sean March 28 2006 Smoking director bucked trends for political satire Seattle Post Intelligencer Bosman Julie March 10 2006 For Tobacco Stealth Marketing is the Norm The New York Times pp C4 Retrieved October 9 2022 Jankowsky Michael April 2 2006 Thank You For O K ing Addiction New York Times pp A4 Retrieved October 9 2022 64th Golden Globe Awards Nominations www goldenglobes com Retrieved October 9 2022 THANK YOU FOR SMOKING In the Awards Spotlight Searchlight Pictures Retrieved October 9 2022 2006 Archives National Board of Review Retrieved October 9 2022 Monger James Christopher Thank You for Smoking Original Soundtrack review Allmusic Rovi Corporation Retrieved September 22 2012 Braun Liz March 24 2006 Smoke Screen Film s Dark Humour Brilliantly Enlightens Us on the Art of Spin The Toronto Sun pp E8 NBC Gets in Smoking Habit Zap2It com Archived from the original on December 7 2006 Retrieved November 24 2006 Adalian Josef October 7 2007 USA lights Smoking spinoff Variety Deggans Eric February 22 2009 Networks Missing the Mark Tampa Bay Times pp 2E Retrieved October 9 2022 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Thank You for Smoking Thank You for Smoking at IMDb Thank You for Smoking at AllMovie Thank You for Smoking at Rotten Tomatoes Thank You for Smoking at Metacritic Thank You for Smoking at Box Office Mojo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thank You for Smoking amp oldid 1131623823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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