Novocaine (2001) Poster

(2001)

User Reviews

Review this title
104 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Mixed feelings
mattymatt4ever13 May 2002
OK, so I have to give this movie points for originality. How many films involve a dentist protagonist? I watched the featurette on the DVD and director David Atkins explained that he wanted to throw a curve ball at the audience by having Steve Martin play the main character in a dark comedy--since audiences are probably expecting something much broader. I didn't get any laughs out of this film; just some mild chuckles. But whether it's a dark comedy or a mystery-thriller, it doesn't quite gel. And ultimately, the film left a bad taste in my mouth--no pun intended. It's watchable, and at times quite intriguing, but it's definitely not a memorable film that I would watch on repeat viewings.

The cast is spirited. Steve Martin never ceases to please, whether he's playing a broad comic role or the straight man. Here, he plays more of the latter. But I wasn't surprised he was able to pull it off. If anybody has seen Lawrence Kasdan's "Grand Canyon," you know Steve is a versatile actor who can easily pull off a serious role. This isn't his first time playing the straight man. Laura Dern is amusing as Steve's neurotic, obsessive-compulsive, karate-kicking wife. Helena Bonham Carter is sassy and sexy, a totally convincing femme fetale. Elias Koteas has some nice moments as Steve's black-sheep brother. And last but not least, Kevin Bacon has an amusing unbilled cameo as an actor researching murder cases for his upcoming movie.

Danny Elfman's opening theme is wonderfully haunting. There are certain elements of "Novocaine" that I liked, it does have its moments (the twist ending totally caught me by surprise!!), but it just doesn't come together.

My score: 6 (out of 10)
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Good performance....seriously flawed film.....
merklekranz21 October 2008
Steve Martin is believable as a dentist who sees his life spiraling out of control after a series of cascading lies sets him up as a murder suspect. What is not believable is the script, which seems to overlook common sense. Cops that fall asleep while guarding a suspect, and worse yet handcuffing a suspect to a flimsy bench in the court house. After an intriguing set up, everything has less and less logic. The proverbial happy ending is totally unbelievable, as is the supposed motivation for the entire storyline. If you want to see a pretty good Steve Martin performance and can overlook Novocaine's many flaws, it is definitely watchable. - MERK
8 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Unusual but highly entertaining thriller
WriConsult11 June 2002
Warning: Spoilers
I must say that about halfway through this movie I thought about bailing out on it. Steve Martin's character kept making SUCH bad decisions that it was painful to watch and you could easily see where it was going.

But I'm glad I stuck with it. Martin did a marvelous job of playing a terribly upstanding character who does things even he thinks himself incapable of, when he meets someone who finds his buttons and keeps on pushing them. *** SPOILER FOLLOWS *** You'd expect him to end up wishing he'd never met her, yet ultimately their meeting is the one thing that saves him. Sure some of the plot twists are a little implausible, but it's well-acted, told from an unusual point of view and a lot of fun. 7 out of 10.
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Painful disappointment
cgray4811 October 2001
Most stars have made a film they regret. I fear this will be the one for Steve Martin, Laura Dern & Helena Bonham Carter. Martin stars as a popular dentist, engaged to his office manager (Dern). One evening when he's alone in the office a mysterious young woman (Carter) comes in and convinces him to give her a prescription for pain killers, promising to come back for treatment the next morning. This one mistake of his sets off a series of intrigues and doublecrosses with a satisfying ending. So why am I so disappointed in the movie? For one thing, the story has holes that no amount of dental work can fill. And the movie is filled with gratuitously painful-to-watch scenes of dental work... starting right from the beginning. This is definitely not a movie to eat popcorn by and, in spite of the satisfying ending, everyone at my screening left the theater feeling sickened and extremely disappointed in Steve Martin.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Decent black comedy
MovieAddict20169 August 2003
I hesitate to call "Novocaine" a film noir, for those knowledgeable cinema buffs out there may harass me and tell me film noir is usually set in the forties, and so on and so forth. But the core of film noir is really the essential idea of the Everyman thrust into incomprehensible situations, not aware of what is happening, why, or how to stop it. Film noirs usually show our hero caught up in framed murder. In "Novocaine," a dentist is thrust into a world of lies, deceit, sex, drugs, and murder. And if that doesn't tickle your fear, then maybe the fact that the dentist is Steve Martin will.

Film noirs are a tricky thing to make correctly. They can fail very easily, such as the incredibly disappointing "D.O.A." They can stumble, mess up. When the rare "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" comes along, it is time to rejoice. I must admit that when I went to see "Novocaine" with Steve Martin, I did not expect very much. I had already heard bad news about it, seen little previews for it, and generally expected it to be a bad movie. Steve Martin in a film noir about a funny dentist? Fortunately, I instantly realized I had made a mistake.

Our tale begins with Dr. Frank Sangster, a mild-mannered dentist (isn't that how it always is in film noirs?) with a fiancé/co-worker, Jean (Laura Dern), and a generally nice, peaceful little world. But that world is shaken when a sleazy, lusty woman named Susan Ivey (Helena Bonham Carter) walks through the doors. She wants Novocaine, but Frank doesn't know this. After a night of passion in the dentist's chair, Frank agrees to give her Novocaine for pain she is having. But the next day, when he thinks he may have gotten away with everything, he finds out that Susan has increased the amount on the prescription he gave her from about 1 to 100, or something like that. Soon Frank is being checked out by the Three-Letter Government Corporations, and, unable to come up with excuses for the missing Novocaine, tries to find Susan and confront her about it. Before long he is caught up in a web of deceit, murder, perjury, all the stuff I said before.

"Novocaine" is a sweet ball of darkness, laughs and film noir. It numbs you, leaving you breathless. It is as if the film itself is "Novocaine." It isn't a terrific comedy, or a terrific film noir, but it is a heck of a lot better than you have probably been led to believe. Steve Martin is about the last person you'd expect to see in a film like this, but my favorite comedian pulls it off. His character, Frank, has no idea what is going on. He isn't experienced in the world of greed, lust and so on and so forth like Susan is--he is new to it, stumbling forward unsure of where to go next. As situations catch up with him, he runs farther, searching the darkness, trying to find answers.

This is a fun movie to watch, the kind of movie I've been looking for. The beginning credits, which show X-rays of the human mouth, set the tone for the film--it is a dark movie, and leaves you feeling dirty throughout. It is the type of movie where you want to sit back, shake your head and make ticking sounds with your mouth. It frustrates you, it leads the characters into wrong decision, and you want to yell at the screen to stop them from doing what they're doing. But when the dirty feeling of the film kicks in, the small laughs along the way provide a balance to the darkness. "Novocaine" is a very well-done film noir. When the credits start rolling, you will feel surges of anger, frustration, laughter and sadness, and then the numbness will kick in on the ride home, and you'll feel like you've just been given a dose of Novocaine.
10 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Almost there...
seanster9 December 2001
Warning: Spoilers
*some minor spoilers*

Novocaine has some original touches to it, but doesn't come through all the way by the end of the film. Steve Martin is good in the role though he isn't given many chances to really craft the role so much as emulate a thousand other "regular guy in trouble" types in the same situation. The voice over falls flat and only occasionally makes an appearance in the movie, making me think it was either an afterthought or greatly cut from its original length. There are some trying moments in this film, cliches you've seen a million other times (ventilation duct escapes), but if you stick around there's something frightfully funny or original soon after (who wouldn't want to shove their dentist into their trunk?). Helena Bonham Carter acts circles around everyone else with what she's given and I think that fact alone keeps the film from being completely typical. Editing and cinematography should also given credit for lifting this film from average to above average.
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Lots of spoilers to follow
pderocco2 December 2001
Warning: Spoilers
if it's possible to spoil something that's already in tatters. This is a "plot script," meant to show off the cleverness of its writer, in the grand tradition of Agatha Christie and Arthur Conan Doyle. For this to work, the writer must actually be clever, and the plot must make sense. This one, alas, is riddled with holes.

It also shares another fatal flaw with earlier second-raters like The Getaway (Alec Baldwin, Kim Basinger) and The Silent Partner (Elliott Gould, Susannah York): even the characters we're expected to sympathize with have the moral sense of garden slugs, and no real virtues beyond the fact that they're good-looking.

Steve Martin, a dentist, has a gorgeous, charming, loving fiancée and assistant in Laura Dern, yet somehow he instantly and implausibly falls for rude, bratty, drug-addicted Helena Bonham Carter. When he discovers that she's conned him into prescribing her some drugs, he lies to cover it up. When he discovers that she's robbed his office of his entire supply of drugs and the DEA wants to know where they went, he lies to cover it up. When her psychopathic brother trashes his office, he lies to cover it up. This is the Idiot Plot Syndrome--at each move, the entire audience is cringing at the stupid mistake made by the protagonist, but each of these mistakes is essential to keep the story going, since doing the self-evidently right thing would clear up the mess and send the audience home.

Martin's childish lies eventually allow someone to frame him for murder. The cops allow an actor (Kevin Bacon), researching a role as a cop, to do the questioning. In a deus ex broken armrest, he escapes effortlessly, and immediately returns to his druggie sweetheart, even though the police are watching her.

In the end, the loving fiancée turns out to be the villainess, having hatched the whole plot in order to take ownership of his business. (A dentist office? Some motive.) She had talked his accountant into rearranging his corporate structure to make her plot possible, yet when his accountant, on the chair for some tooth drilling, began to spill the beans, it was he, not she, who insisted that the accountant shut up and submit to the nitrous oxide.

Her original idea had merely been to frame him for drug dealing, yet somehow she had had the amazing foresight to make a denture copy of his teeth, for the purpose of putting incriminating bite marks all over a dead body that only at the last moment intruded unexpectedly into her plan. In the end, she commits a second unnecessary murder, and is filmed in the act by an office video camera she knew all about. Martin, however, manages to fake his own death and abscond to France with his loser girlfriend (now miraculously cured of her addiction, and full of his child), even though it is now completely unnecessary that he run away.

I'll stop here, not because I can't think of any more flaws, but because it's pointless to do so. Maybe there's a decent Sherlock Holmes on the tube.
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Steve Martin as a dentist again!
Boba_Fett113825 July 2007
I think a lot of people don't mind seeing Steve Martin again playing a dentist after his role in the 1986 version of "Little Shop of Horrors", although of course his role in this movie is quite different.

"Novocaine" is a movie that is using all of the classic film-noir ingredients but above all the movie is a comedy. A black-comedy but a comedy nevertheless. And it's a rather well made and written one. The movie has some nice twists but never forgets to also entertain.

Steve Martin shows why he is still a much asked actor for comedies, even though his best roles are long since behind him, he still knows how to handle the genre and time things in his performances, without ever going over-the-top with anything. Helena Bonham Carter is a great femme fatale for this movie and Laura Dern also plays a surprising role. The movie also has solid supporting actors in it such as Lynne Thigpen, Elias Koteas, Keith David and Scott Caan. The older Scott Caan gets, the more he starts to look like his father, also acting-wise. Kevin Bacon also makes a totally fun cameo as an actor who is doing research for a cop role.

The great and typically wacky musical main titles for the movie were composed by Danny Elfman, which set the tone for the movie really. Most of the rest of the score was composed by Steve Bartek, who normally works as Danny Elfman's orchestrator.

The story is enough to draw you into the movie. It has some unexpected twists, although these all occur toward the end. The movie perhaps does become a tad bit too serious at times, which doesn't completely suit the movie and its atmosphere. Thankfully the movie is mostly just fun. It's good quality entertainment to watch and better than your average film-noir/comedy crossover attempt, which is mainly thanks to the great cast of the movie and the solid written story.

7/10

http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Difficult as it is to imagine that a great cast and great concept can be mal-delivered, Novocaine proves it possible.
GeneraX28 July 2002
Steve Martin has either grown more talented and brilliant with age or we are now having more opportunities to witness this. His subtleness and incredible face are alluring. The entire cast deserves kudos for a great ensemble. On the other hand, the writing and directing do not.

Unlike the cast members who were top rate, the direction was simplistic, not in a minimalist fashion, but in a puerile attempt: first this happens, then that, now everyone act vaudevillian. The direction appeared to be confused between stage and film. The writing was weak with annoying one liners and non-clever phrases. Not enough credit was given to the intellect of the audience and too much was spelled out for us. None the less, I managed to finish the film and was rewarded with a unique and sweet ending.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
It does hit it's mark, but leaves it at that (a solid B)
wuzupn_tb6 December 2002
Everything in this movie starts out realistic. Then that all changes after the murder, when you can't take it seriously anymore. But it's still fun, and pretty damn funny too. I liked a lot, and would reccomend this dark comedy. B, 7/10
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Far fetched, gory, and ludicrous.
centen5 January 2002
What exactly was the point? For the first hour it didn't seem so bad and it made me wonder why the critics panned it. But it went downhill fast after that and became so far fetched it must have tested all the actors' skill to do this one with a straight face. Steve Martin needs to stick to comedy,and Helena Bonham Carter should get back in her corset, we've seen enough of her. A talented cast was wasted on this. The ending made me wonder if this wasn't just an attempt to spoof film noir. If so, they should not have packaged it as a comedy. No one seems sure of the genre, it's often listed as a comedy and a drama..(?) Films which try to mix genres often fail in my opinion. The audience is left confused and disappointed...
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
The anti-Roxanne
doug-69714 February 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I rented Novocaine because I like Steve Martin and Helena Bonham Carter and also because I knew nothing about the movie. I enjoyed it and it never bored me at any moment.

The movie seems to be characterized as a "black comedy", but I felt it was more of a satire. I think Novocaine is commenting on the struggle we all quietly face between living a safe, conventional life and pursuing our fantasies. Frank Sangster (Steve Martin) seems to have it all, money and a beautiful fiancé, with the only glimpse of discontent being and old French movie he plays for the patients, but which is probably more for him. When the sultry Susan (Helena Bonham Carter) sits in his dental chair, his fantasies are suddenly triggered. While most men (all?) would sympathize with Frank for his temptation, we are led to believe its cause is more of a gigantic moment of weakness, not because he's unhappy with his fiancé, Jean (Laura Dern). Also, while Frank is certainly a victim, there's nothing particularly noble about his actions during the film and you don't completely sympathize with him. And even when he achieves his "fantasy", it is so clichéd and paid for at such a high price, the movie doesn't ennoble Frank's fantasy. On one hand, the movie seems to be about pursuing one's dreams, but it's fairly cynical about it.

One of the best aspects of the movie is the effort given to the minor characters. It felt like they tried to give everyone something interesting to do. Even Kevin Bacon shows up for a small, but very funny part. Some of the movie is predictable and implausible, but there were enough surprises to keep it interesting and if I want complete believability I'll watch a documentary.

If there was any weakness in the movie, it's that, while we can understand Frank falling for Susan, there's not enough effort given to make it convincing that Susan had really fallen for Frank. This may have been on purpose early in the movie, to keep you guessing about Susan's intentions, but there should have been one scene before the movie is over which tells you why she wants to be with him. And the movie is a bit thin overall on the motivations and personality of Susan. She is apparently a drug addict and having a "difficult" relationship with her brother, but this is passed over too little.

If you want to watch something a bit different, sort of an "anti-Roxanne", this might be worth renting. On the other hand, if you fear going to the dentist, you may wish to take care.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Comedy or suspense film? Hard to tell...
nanooks24 August 2001
This was a good movie, but there were several plot holes you could drive a truck through. I found myself saying "No one would really do that" over and over again. It seemed as though the director wanted to do a straight suspense film, and Steve Martin wanted to do a screwball comedy, and in the end, it's neither one. The characters are well played, and Helena Bonham Carter did an especially good job with a big departure from her previous roles as refined British noble women. At times, the actors got very close to being caricatures instead of characters. All in all, an enjoyable film if you aren't expecting the quality of "The Spanish Prisoner", which I think is still Steve Martin's best film ever.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Pretty pointless film.
gridoon24 July 2003
The box-office failure of "Novocaine" is not hard to explain. Apart from Steve Martin's excellent performance, there simply isn't another reason to recommend this picture: it has few funny moments, few surprises and almost no tension. After a relatively offbeat start, it travels to routine Hitchcock innocent-man-wrongly-accused territory, before finally arriving at a very strange and very gruesome ending. Besides, Helena Bonham Carter's miscasting throws the whole film off balance; for the plot to work we have to be willing to believe that an affluent dentist would be willing to give up his entire life (which he himself describes as "perfect") just to be with this one woman, but Carter isn't seductive or appealing enough in the role. The other supporting actors fare much better, but most of them are underused. (**)
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Freaky
elcinematico19 March 2004
This has been a quite entertaining movie. Not really a top notch movie, not really working as a comedy, but still pretty entertaining. It started out veeery slow and boooring - it took a little too long for it to evolve. But when it started to it got better and better. There's that very freaky story and a wrecked Bonham-Carter (she's good playin such characters ;-) adding most to this film. However the ending was a little too fantastic since it shouldn't be a problem for the forensics to ... no, I won't spoil hehe.

My favourite scene was Martin's call where he spoke to that guy who answered the phone with "barbie's bakery. it's mr. muffin man speakin." LOL

My overall rating is: 6.5/10 - if you're not sure what to watch, try this one. It works pretty well as entertainment.
5 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Decent movie.
honeygrrl19783 February 2003
This movie was enjoyable though at times it was a bit predictable. I'd like to add, however, that I didn't predict the ending! Overall, it was a little quirky as might be expected from Steve Martin. A must see for Steve Martin fans.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
An average Steve Martin movie
HunterDK8 September 2002
I like most of Steve Martin's work, and I also liked this movie, but I was not impressed.

Novocaine has it's moments where it is really funny, but there are also some periods where not much is happening. It's not a typical Steve Martin movie where you laugh all the time, Novocaine has some serious and thrilling moments that we don't see in most other Steve Martin movies.

The movie is a different Steve Martin movie, but there are still some good moments in Novocaine. I think this movie deserves 6/10, it is worth watching.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Novocaine or Sleeping Gas??
roland-sinn14 July 2003
Warning: Spoilers
In my opinion, Novocaine had a brilliant trailer, but the film was a big disappointment. The first time I saw the trailer on a video rental, I knew I had to see Novocaine. I was expecting a Cohen Brothers style film of sharp wit and beautiful surreality. What I got was 'try hard' wit and ridiculous implausibility.

Now this really p****s me off because I love Steve Martin, I love Laura Dern, I love Helena Bonham Carter and I love Kevin Bacon. I really expected more from a cast of very talented, very experienced actors. This basically means that the fault didn't lie with the cast. It lay with the severe implausibility of the story .

SPOILERS IMMINENT!! REPEAT, SPOILERS IMMINENT!!

At the film's beginning, Steve Martin's engaged to Laura Dern (what more could an average Joe want?), he's got a good job, he's got a very nice home, he's portrayed as a stable, even tempered middle aged dude. Suddenly Helena BC appears, asks for a script to be filled and Steve allows her to scam 10 times the amount of drugs from a local pharmacy! Two or so scenes later, when Helena BC steals the entire drug supply from Steve's dental surgery, Steve coyly makes up a paper thin story to the authorities that wouldn't stand up to detailed scrutiny by investigators!!

This is when Novocaine jumped off the rails of plausibility and `Plot' gave way to `Series of Events'. To anyone out there who thought these scenes seem logical, do you realise how big a crime Steve's committing?? How much senseless risk?? How much all the drugs which Helena stole cost?? If Steve wanted to have some sex on the side, it would have been much, much cheaper and much less stress to go visit a high class lady of the night every night for several weeks. And as for the climactic scene in the film from which the title is derived, I was physically disgusted and really couldn't believe that an tempered, stable middle aged dude would be capable of taking out all of their own teeth, as well as those of a corpse. Come on!! It felt like the writers thought of that one scene first and tried to create a movie around it.

Overall, not too badly directed, but very immaturely written. Looks like a student film. Steve, Laura, Hel and Kev all should have known better. 2/10
3 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Laura Dern gave us a real surprise at the end.
milwhitt708 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Whatever Steve Martin is in is probably going to be good, and this one was. It was a slow starter but it finally got off to a fast moving film. Steve, the dentist, was taken in by a drug user and when he gave her a prescription for 5 pills, he learned that she had added a "O" to his figure and made it 50. Once he started lying, he had to keep on lying to cover up the other lies. He was apparently an innocent victim and didn't know it for a long time. There was one murder of the addicts brother, and another murder of Steve's brother. He finally figured out the one person who could get all the information together and and set him up to be convicted. When he pulled his own teeth and replaced them in another false set, we could really see the sense of it all. The end was the greatest surprise of all.
3 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Title Says It All-- It'll Leave You Numb
jhclues8 May 2002
Rarely does the title of a film say as much about it as this one does; because by the time you get to the end, there's a good chance you're going to feel quite numb, as if you've been given a body-size shot of novocaine. And it's not because there's so much wrong with this film-- it's just that there's not too much right about it; it's seemingly beyond the help of even it's high profile cast, and that's even if they were, indeed, trying to help in the first place. Unfortunately, the evidence-- with regards to one of the stars of the project, at any rate-- inexplicably points to the contrary, and it leaves `Novocaine,' written and directed by David Atkins, somewhere out on a limb; a precarious place to be, considering that the tree itself was not strong enough to take root in the first place. Simply put, this one's on such shaky ground that you'll be convinced that there has to be a fault line running along beneath it somewhere, and while you're trying to figure out where, you just might miss the point of the whole thing, which is something along the lines of `If You Play With Fire You'll Get Burned.' Or better yet, pick your own platitude and fill in the blank. Either way, there's not going to be any getting around the numb thing. Just accept it, and try to move on.

Frank Sangster (Steve Martin) is a dentist with a successful practice, a beautiful finance, Jean (Laura Dern), and a future that promises more of the same. Until one day out of the blue, Susan (Helena Bonham Carter), a new patient, shows up at his office with a toothache. And before it's over, he gives her a root canal, and she gives him the `works,' which includes wheedling a prescription of Demerol out of him. Can it be she has a drug problem? Can Frank smell scam? Apparently not, because the next day the entire drug supply in his office is missing, and so is Susan. She does leave one of her more personal items behind in the office, however, and when Jean gets wind of it, Frank-- to paraphrase a famous line-- has some ‘splaining to do. And in veritably a nanosecond, the life of one Frank Sangster is turned upside down, and that old gravity, reality, begins it's pull on him; and there's only one way it can possibly take him: Suffice to say, it isn't up.

Bringing a feature film to the screen is no easy task, and it must be especially challenging to make the attempt while wearing two hats (writer and director). And from all appearances, this is where Atkins gets into trouble, as the problems with this film (and there are many) begin with the screenplay. Writer Atkins simply doesn't give director Atkins much to work with, and it just may be that he was too close to his own material, which prevented him from seeing it objectively. And that objective viewpoint is something this film needed. Badly. With the exception of a pivotal element of the climax, there is nothing original about the story at all, and that single element is too ludicrous to be effective, or believable. And therein lies the basic problem with the film: Even if you manage to suspend disbelief while watching it, you would still need an imagination with a Gumby-like flexibility before any of it would seem convincing or the least bit probable. Given a best case scenario, the story just isn't plausible at all. The dialogue is poorly scripted (For instance, as it unfolds, no less than three characters ask Frank, `Can I ask you a personal question?' which is about two times too many to be credible), the execution of the material lacks the fine-tuning it needs and, inexplicably, the actors fail to bring any definition at all to their characters (they needed help, `direction,' and obviously Atkins-- for whatever reason-- was unable to supply it). Filmmaking is inherently a collaborative enterprise, and when a project lacks that cohesive unity, it invariably has a negative impact on the final product. And it certainly does here.

Steve Martin turns in what is arguably the most convincing performance of the film, but it is far from his best work. His portrayal of Frank lacks the nuance he usually brings to the characters he creates, and the result is a fairly nondescript protagonist. And, though Frank comes across as `real' overall, Martin fails to really get into his skin or to explore the motivations that drive Frank on to doing what he does; and because of all that precedes it, as well as the way in which it is presented, what would have been merely a ridiculous ending becomes absolutely ludicrous. Martin has a good go at it, but in the end he barely manages to keep his Frank afloat, and under closer scrutiny, the credibility slowly begins to unravel.

Helena Bonham Carter, meanwhile, gives a performance that doesn't hold up to a casual glance, let alone close scrutiny, and it's one of the biggest surprises of the film. The usually reliable Carter-- who is a terrific, versatile actor-- winds up with possibly the most unrealistic character she's ever created. For this film to work, the audience must believe that Susan is an addict; But there is nothing in Carter's portrayal to confirm, or even indicate, that this is the case. And here, more than anywhere else, is where the credibility of the entire film dissolves, negating any of the more positive aspects in the balance. It's a one-dimensional, one note character, and it takes it's toll on the whole picture.

Laura Dern has also done better work-- though, as Jean, she looks good, and certainly brings a lot of energy to the film. A decent effort, but it's not enough to save `Novocaine,' and-- like the audience-- she gets little return on the investment of her time here. 3/10.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Good, but
dbiester15 February 2003
Basically its Steve Martin in a modern film noir, only in color. If you were wondering about Helen Bonham Carter's performance in fight Club, here it is again. It sags a bit at times, never really builds momentum. Acting was great, story is good, definitely worth seeing, but not as good as it could have been. Interesting Kevin bacon turn as an actor researching a film. Best quote: "this isn't a movie, it's real life."
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Far too gory for my taste
HotToastyRag30 August 2019
Remember in Little Shop of Horrors when Steve Martin played a dentist? Those of you who loved him in that will probably really look forward to renting Novocaine, in which he also plays a dentist. I fell into that trap, too, and while I did sit through the entire movie, I wasn't exactly happy that I did. This movie is not for the squeamish, like yours truly, and there's a particularly cringe-worthy scene that I had to fast-forward.

Steve plays a dentist with a pretty good life. Business is solid, and his dental hygienist is his girlfriend, Laura Dern. Then, when the mysterious and clearly bad-news Helena Bonham Carter comes to him with a bad tooth, his entire world turns upside down. First, Helena asks for a hefty pain prescription, then she brings alcohol to the office late at night and seduces him, then she robs his entire supply of drugs, then her violent brother Scott Caan threatens Steve and Laura-and then things get really out of control.

If you like Helena Bonham Carter and the wacky movies she tends to make, you might like this movie. I found it a little too gory, even though I was able to appreciate the tension in the plot and Steve Martin's dramatic performance. I also found The Whole Nine Yards too gory, for a similar reason, so keep that clue in mind if you decide to rent this. Keep your eyes peeled for Keith David, who always adds an extra oomph to a supporting cast, and his shadow Kevin Bacon, an actor doing research for his next role as a police detective.

DLM warning: If you suffer from vertigo or dizzy spells, like my mom does, this movie might not be your friend. Throughout the entire movie, there are random flashes that cut to x-rays, and the sudden strobing might make you sick. In other words, "Don't Look, Mom!"

Kiddy Warning: Obviously, you have control over your own children. However, due to sex scenes, violence, and gore, I wouldn't let my kids watch it.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
What an unexpected surprise!
jotix1007 December 2001
Novocaine is a very strange film. It doesn't make up its mind whether it's a take off on a genre or is it playing straight. That said, the story has a lot of laughs and it was a complete surprise given the negative comments one had heard about this film. David Watkins' script and direction give this film a different look of what Hollywood is giving us lately. Steve Martin is a very difficult actor to cast and he has to have the right vehicle and direction in order to excel, as he does here. Sometimes Mr. Martin comes across rather shallow in some of his screen portrayals, but as the dentist at the center of this comedy, he is at the top of his craft. Laura Dern is just perfect in her role. She keeps getting better all the time, whether it's comedy, as it is here, or her other film this year, Focus. She's an actress who doesn't repeat herself. She's a true original. Helena Bonham-Carter is perfect as the junkie that appears in Steve Martin's life. Quite a change for her image, better known for her appearances in serious films. This must have been quite a turn around for this actress, better remembered for her work in serious English drama. The most remarkable scenes are those of the great Kevin Bacon as an actor tailing David Keith in preparation for an upcoming police film. He is hilarious as the method actor in search of ways to interpret the real life detective in the movies.

All in all, this is a very satisfying comedy.
28 out of 38 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Take a bite of life's bountiful harvest
manuel-pestalozzi19 May 2006
Novocaine is a watchable mystery/drama/film noir/comedy. The performance of Steve Martin is very good, he proves once more that good comedians know a lot about timing and pacing. It's really a delight to watch him. And Laura Dern is even better! She plays a truly interesting role of a high octane, hyperactive maniac of a woman.

Basically, the movie is about people who'd rather like to be somewhere else. The locations in clean, antiseptic no-man's land somewhere in the USA and the main character's fantasies about romantic French rural life (has ceased to exist a long time ago, I'm afraid - if it ever had existed) help to get that message through beautifully.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
horrible.
akeru11 August 2002
That's really the only word for this. What a travesty, to take such a great concept and make such a piece of crap. A noir comedy should be exactly my cup of tea, too. But the comedy was too uneven, and the noir touches were mixed into a modern-sensibilities romantic plotline that indicates the director doesn't understand noir. The plot contained holes in areas that were just too vital - the ultra-shocking climax turns out to have been completely unnecessary in the denouement. I liked the visual gimmicks though; wipes using an X-ray effect, and intercuts of animated X-rays at key moments. It was visually good - reminded me a bit of "Suture". But altogether one of the most disappointing films I've seen in a while.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed