IN GOOD COMPANY
Dennis Quaid is perfectly cast as Dan Foreman, a slightly weary yet still dashing advertising boss and dedicated family man. He seems to have it all as a wholesome and admirable father, an existence which smacks of the archetypical mid-century sitcom dad that he so brilliantly portrayed as the secretly homosexual husband-father in Todd Haynes' FAR FROM HEAVEN. Enter Carter Duryea (THAT 70s SHOW's Topher Grace), a cocky young upstart hired to replace him. Before long, Dan is forced to be deferential to his new baby-faced boss, not only in the office but also at his own dinner table when Dan begins dating his lovely daughter Alex (Scarlett Johanssen). This old-fashioned, slightly soap-operatic twist is the perfect catalyst for the integration of humanity into an environment (and cinematic genre) that is so often devoid of it, and the film simultaneously lightens in spirit and deepens in emotion as a slow-yet-sure, father-and-son bond develops between the former adversaries.
Condition: Brand New & Factory Sealed Leading Role: Topher Grace, Dennis Quaid, Scarlett Johansson Director: Paul Weitz Rating: Rated PG-13 Release Date: May 2005 Format: Widescreen DVD Genre: Comedy Region: 1 Run Time: 109 minutes UPC: 025192583322 Our Price: $9.99
Editorial Reviews "[A] nimble, engagingly lightweight drama....It makes for an agreeable solo directing debut." New York Times - Manohla Dargis (12/29/2004)
"[G]enial, generous-spirited and unmistakably entertaining..." Los Angeles Times - Kenneth Turan (12/29/2004)
"[T]his workplace satire gets in some licks along the way. And it gives Dennis Quaid one of his best screen showcases." USA Today - Mike Clark (12/29/2004)
"[A] bouncy, optimistic comedy....This winning comedy is about the contrast between the enduringly pleasing, quintessentially baby boomer masculinity of Dennis Quaid and the addictively delightful Gen-X charms of Topher Grace..." Entertainment Weekly - Lisa Schwarzbaum (01/21/2005)
"Fresh comic thinking spices up this smart cookie of a satire from director-writer Paul Weitz. He makes it sexually provocative and subversively hilarious." Rolling Stone - Peter Travers (01/27/2005)
"[A] smart, charming film that moves confidently between comedy and drama..." Sight and Sound - Mark Olsen (03/01/2005)
"[A] smart, unpredictable comedy with hidden emotional depths." Movieline's Hollywood Life - Stephen Farber (02/01/2005)
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