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Novocaine (2001)
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Reviews Counted:105
Fresh:39
Rotten:66
Average Rating:4.6/10
Consensus: The quirky Novocaine flirts with both dark comedy and noir suspense, but the result is a jarring mix of tones which never quite mesh.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for violence, sexuality, language and drug content
Runtime: 1 hr 35 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Nov 16, 2001 Limited
Box Office: $1,512,342
Synopsis:
Novocaine, Artisan Entertainment’s edgy, unpredictable crime thriller, stars Steve Martin as a prosperous dentist whose well-ordered existence is thrown into turmoil when an alluring new patient...
Novocaine, Artisan Entertainment’s edgy, unpredictable crime thriller, stars Steve Martin as a prosperous dentist whose well-ordered existence is thrown into turmoil when an alluring new patient draws him into a seedy underworld of sex, drugs and murder. This stylish macabre film also stars Laura Dern, Helena Bonham-Carter and Scott Caan, and marks the feature directorial debut of writer David Atkins.
Frank Sangster is living the American Dream. Blessed with a thriving dental practice and a sleek modernist home, Frank is happily engaged to his ambitious dental hygienist, Jean Noble (Laura Dern). His perfectly managed life quickly unravels, however, when Susan Ivy (Helena Bonham-Carter), a seductive new patient with an appetite for pain-killers, settles into his dentist chair. Before long, drugs are missing from his office, Susan’s psychotic brother Duane (Scott Caan) is stalking him, and Frank himself is wanted by both the DEA and the police for drug trafficking and murder. As he flees from authorities, Frank becomes increasingly drawn to Susan, and through her learns he is the victim of an elaborate con scheme, which may also involve his wayward brother, Harlan (Elias Koteas). Fueled by the desire to create a new life for himself and Susan, Frank plunges into a shadowy world of drugs and violence in order to prove his innocence, only to discover that breaking the law might provide his only hope for freedom.
Defying expectations at every turn, Novocaine takes a twisted look at the menace that lurks beneath the innocent veneer of the everyday. Writer/director David Atkins has turned classic film noir on its head, distinguishing his work with surprising plot twists, surrealist flourishes and a mischievous sense of humor. With an all-star cast, featuring Steve Martin in a brilliantly restrained performance, Novocaine proves that crime is no longer just for criminals.
Starring: Steve Martin, Helena Bonham-Carter, Laura Dern, Kevin Bacon
Starring: Steve Martin, Helena Bonham-Carter, Laura Dern, Kevin Bacon, Scott Caan, Elias Koteas
Director: David Atkins
Director: David Atkins
Screenwriter: David Atkins
Producer: Paul Mones, Daniel M. Rosenberg
Composer: Steve Bartek, Danny Elfman
Studio: Artisan Entertainment
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Reviews for Novocaine
This Hitchcockian yarn compensates for its leading man's rather anonymous performance with some well-placed shocks, a morbid sense of humour, and a climax that will literally put your teeth on edge.
An odd, unsettling film, an uneasy blend of comedy and sadism that never seems to mesh into a coherent or particularly enjoyable whole.
...making a brief stopover in theaters before reaching its final destination on a high-numbered cable channel during hours when only film critics and night watchmen are awake.
The casting is peculiar, the tone is off, the plot is uninteresting and the ending is sorry.
Plays like the sort of silly shared fantasy that a group of dental students might come up with late one night, after too much coffee and cramming for finals.
Novocaine, like the drug for which it was named, will leave the viewer numb.
I can think of worse things than Novocaine. Like getting a tooth filled.
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