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Roger Dodger

  • 2002
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Roger Dodger (2002)
Home Video Trailer from Artisan
Play trailer2:28
2 Videos
42 Photos
ComedyDrama

After breaking up with his lover and boss, a smooth-talking man takes his teenaged nephew out on the town in search of sex.After breaking up with his lover and boss, a smooth-talking man takes his teenaged nephew out on the town in search of sex.After breaking up with his lover and boss, a smooth-talking man takes his teenaged nephew out on the town in search of sex.

  • Director
    • Dylan Kidd
  • Writer
    • Dylan Kidd
  • Stars
    • Campbell Scott
    • Jesse Eisenberg
    • Isabella Rossellini
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dylan Kidd
    • Writer
      • Dylan Kidd
    • Stars
      • Campbell Scott
      • Jesse Eisenberg
      • Isabella Rossellini
    • 134User reviews
    • 77Critic reviews
    • 75Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 12 wins & 14 nominations total

    Videos2

    Roger Dodger
    Trailer 2:28
    Roger Dodger
    Roger Dodger
    Trailer 1:05
    Roger Dodger
    Roger Dodger
    Trailer 1:05
    Roger Dodger

    Photos42

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Campbell Scott
    Campbell Scott
    • Roger Swanson
    Jesse Eisenberg
    Jesse Eisenberg
    • Nick
    Isabella Rossellini
    Isabella Rossellini
    • Joyce
    Elizabeth Berkley
    Elizabeth Berkley
    • Andrea
    Jennifer Beals
    Jennifer Beals
    • Sophie
    Mina Badie
    Mina Badie
    • Donna
    Ben Shenkman
    Ben Shenkman
    • Donovan
    Chris Stack
    • Chris
    Morena Baccarin
    Morena Baccarin
    • Girl in Bar
    Lisa Emery
    Lisa Emery
    • Woman in Bar
    Flora Diaz
    Flora Diaz
    • Young Working Girl
    Stephanie Gatschet
    Stephanie Gatschet
    • Angela - High School Beauty
    Colin Fickes
    Colin Fickes
    • Angus
    Tommy Savas
    Tommy Savas
    • Darren
    Gabriel Millman
    • Felix
    Libby Larson
    • Patricia
    Courtney Simon
    • Susan - Nick's Mother
    • (as Courtney Sherman)
    Peter Appel
    Peter Appel
    • Alert Doorman
    • Director
      • Dylan Kidd
    • Writer
      • Dylan Kidd
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews134

    6.818.2K
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    Featured reviews

    Buddy-51

    The Artful Roger

    Roger Swanson is a coldhearted, fast-talking yuppie businessman who has cynically reduced the man-woman equation to its Darwinian essentials. To Roger, women are objects to be conquered not people to be respected, and he has learned to employ his good looks, charm and over-analytical mind in the service of getting laid. When Nick, his naïve, inexperienced 16-year old nephew comes to town, Roger decides to train the boy in the fine art of manipulation and seduction, taking him out for a night on the town that the youngster will not soon forget.

    As conceived by first time writer/director Dylan Kidd, `Roger Dodger' is less a full-fledged narrative and more a series of extended conversations. And I, for one, couldn't be happier, for the dialogue Kidd has come up with is sharp, observant, insightful and witty, as Roger opens up and reveals his unique perspective on the dating scene. He uses his mouth like a machine gun, shooting rounds of rapid-fire, staccato comments, indifferent to who's left standing when he's done. He really has no qualms about `corrupting' his underage nephew, never seeing or caring about the corrosive effect he may be having on him. In the process, we learn quite a bit about Roger as a person, most especially the aloofness he feels from others and his inability to make any kind of emotional connection that really works. Long estranged from his father and sister, Roger is also facing a breakup with the older woman he's recently come to fancy (his boss in fact). Roger is a humorous figure but also an immensely sad one, for he really does seem - for all his bravado and bluster to the contrary - to be a lonely, unhappy guy. We are simultaneously drawn to him by his confidence and charisma and repelled by his smarminess and coldness, just like the characters in the film. As Roger, Campbell Scott does a superb job bringing out both of those seemingly contradictory qualities. A non-stop talker, Roger knows how to draw all the attention in the room to himself; he is (at the risk of mixing my metaphors here) like a chattering vortex up there on the screen and we can't help but be sucked in by his personality and presence. No wonder Scott won the 2002 award for Best Actor from the National Board of Review. In fact, I haven't seen a performance this smooth, alive and energetic in a very long time. Equally impressive is young Jesse Eisenberg whose wide-eyed innocence and youthful decency provide an effective counterpoint to the brash but empty Roger. Isabella Rossellini, Elizabeth Berkley and Jennifer Beals also turn in outstanding performances as the various ladies who play a part in the two men's adventure.

    In his debut film, Kidd shows himself to be in full control of his medium. He employs a jittery, handheld camera in almost every scene, a technique that may bother some people but which heightens the sense of realism so essential to the nature of the story. In this way, the audience is made to feel almost like an eavesdropper on the various conversations. Kidd should also be commended - in this day of maximum special effects and minimal verbiage - for allowing his characters to speak at great length on any number of topics. Many another filmmaker would have felt intimidated by such a heavy reliance on dialogue. Kidd, obviously, feels intoxicated by the beauty of language and his intoxication becomes ours.

    Roger is a fascinating case study mainly because we feel so ambivalent in our attitude towards him. Just as we are about to consign him to the category of heartless, cold-blooded b***ard, he wins us over by showing us that barest glimmer of humanity that peeks out every so often from beneath his well-oiled exterior.

    `Roger Dodger' is not only an intriguing, amusing and poignant tale of realtionships and sex in the modern world, but a confident first film that augurs well for its gifted young maker.
    8jotix100

    Artful dodger

    Newcomer Dylan Kidd's first feature is a very refreshing exercise in filmmaking. This is an incredible debut for Mr Kidd. Let's hope his next release will be worth of the promise he shows in this one.

    Of course, this film would be nothing without the presence of Campbell Scott. Mr. Scott gets better with every new screen appearance. His Roger is a tragic figure in spite of the front he presents to all the women he tries to conquer. The last scenes of Roger in his apartment are nothing short of magnificent. We get to see the real man then, and it's not funny what we see.

    The interplay with the nephew, Nick, beautifully played by Jesse Eisenberg, is the best acting of the year.

    The women in the film are brilliant too. Isabella Rosellini is incredible as Roger's boss. The ladies in the single bar, Elizabeth Berkley and Jennifer Beals are true portraits of women that are looking for Mr. Right in the wrong places.

    This film is a rarity. Discover it.
    8dromasca

    Sex in the city - the male version

    This first film of director Dylan Kidd is a smart and entertaining tentative for a male version of 'Sex in the City'. There certainly is a question mark over the morality of a story involving a 16 years young boy tutored into skirt-chase by his adult uncle, and this is one of the very few occasions where the R-rate is justified in my eyes. However, in the era of 'Sex in the City' this genre is already in line with popular entertainment.

    The film is smart, extremely well acted, sometimes funny, sometimes moving and overall a pleasant cinema experience. It is probably worth seeing on small screen, as many scenes are intentionally filmed with an unsure hand-held camera. This works well on TV screen, may be a problem in a theater. 8 out of 10 on my personal scale.
    7movieguy1021

    Roger Dodger: 7/10

    Roger Swanson (Campbell Scott) scores every night, he likes to say. However, he has a breakup with his boss and lover (well, duh…) Joyce (Isabella Rossellini), and his 16-year-old nephew Nick (Jesse Eisenberg) shows up, saying that he was looking at colleges in the New York area and decided to give his favorite Uncle Roger a visit. Roger talks a mile a minute, very suave like, and decides to take Nick out on the town in search of sex, which, he claims, is `everywhere'.

    A fine, inventive movie, with good acting by the leads. Not many movies would dare to go out on a limb, and this isn't a Hollywood movie (it's distributed by Artisan), but those who have seen it have enjoyed it. Its script, by director Dylan Kidd, is often funny, and could go as Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex but Were Afraid to Ask Part 2, since Nick is basically naïve and oblivious. However, the script leads into the first problem I would like to talk about.

    Although funny at many times, during the many lulls, the drama, which is supposed to ensue, doesn't ensue. I didn't feel touched or sympathetic or anything during the `dramatic' sequences, especially during the end, but at least it goes back to comedy, with the fate of Roger and Nick. The script has many laugh-out-loud moments, however. I love the first scene, where Roger is talking to Joyce, Donovan (Ben Shenkman), and Donna (Mina Badie) at the restaurant, and he's going on all about Darwin and evolution, and the eventual fate of the genders. This is a good introduction to Roger: lots of talk, but he can't back it up, and you can tell he has now idea what in the world he is actually saying.

    Scott won a few awards for his performance in Roger Dodger, which I can understand. He totally got into his role, and at times it didn't seem like he was acting, everything was coming naturally to him. An example of that is when he's talking to Nick about different ways to look at women (which is about a 10 minute take), he just keeps on talking and talking like it wasn't scripted. I could almost hear the director laughing in the background. I hope that this bounces his career more, because he is a great actor. Eisenberg was also very good as the nervous teen, he also seemed to know what he was doing.

    Another point I really liked was the music. It was crystalline, and it sounded solid, which is probably symbolism for Roger: he thinks he's solid with the women, but he really has as much to learn as the student. He thinks that he knows everything that's there, but he doesn't really, and he figures that out throughout the movie. To be forewarned is to be forearmed, so here I go: if you're a feminist or against sexism, this isn't really your movie. Roger's view of women won't appeal to those, but he does talk about that the female sex will eventually rule the earth and men will be their slave (aren't they already?). If you don't mind, though, it's a very good movie that may not deserve all of the acclaim it's getting but is still better than most of the Hollywood drek that's out now.

    My rating: 7/10

    Rated R for sexuality and language.
    7moviesleuth2

    Cracks like a whip

    Meet Roger Swanson, the world's most arrogant and chauvinistic SOB. To him, women are inferior and are to be regarded as conquests. Yet as appalling and thoroughly unlikable as Roger is, he's played by Campbell Scott, who's so good that he makes Roger a person who is quite literally addicting to watch.

    After getting dumped by his boss, Joyce (Isabella Rossellini), the ultimate player Roger is more than a little peeved. But when his nephew shows up at his office asking for advice on women, Roger takes it upon himself to show the 16 year old how to be the ultimate womanizer.

    Needless to say, this film is about Roger. Unless the performance was pitch-perfect, the film would fall flat on its face. Fortunately, indie-film king Campbell Scott is playing him. Campbell Scott is dynamite. With a razor-sharp wit and an arsenal of one-liners, pick-up lines and other assorted ways of getting sex, Roger is compulsively watchable. There's really not much that he says that hasn't been said before, but Scott is so stunning that it doesn't matter. His dialogue is electric, and Scott attacks it with relish. Yet as darkly funny as some of the things he says are, Scott understands all facets of Roger. His scenes with Joyce are some of the most telling about Roger, and arguably some of his most well-acted. He still has the same penchant for one-liners and shocking views on women, but Scott delivers it with anger and frustration.

    His co-stars are great as well. Jesse Eisenberg is terrific as his nervous nephew, Nick. He's young and naiive, and Roger is more than happy to enlighten him. Their two targets, Andrea (Elizabeth Berkley) and Sophie (Jennifer Beals) are terrific. Both are gorgeous, and are totally into Nick (and to his surprise, not the least bit into Roger). Andrea has a wit to match Roger's, while Sophie is nice and falls for Nick. Isabella Rossellini is also solid as Joyce, Roger's boss, who is more than a little annoyed with him when he won't let their affair end.

    Dylan Kidd has a terrific script. Unfortunately, this was shot on a hand-held camera, which is not the way to shoot it. However, this was probably due to budget constraints. The only scene that doesn't work is the final one. It's out of character for Roger, and thus rings false.

    Yet this film is all Campbell Scott. The cast and script may help, but this is his movie. And Campbell Scott is unforgettable in a performance that in a perfect world, would have garnered him an Oscar. We can only hope that in the future the prestigious award will finally come his way.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jesse Eisenberg received his very first kiss from Jennifer Beals in a scene from this movie.
    • Quotes

      Roger: You can't sell a product without first making people feel bad.

      Nick: Why not?

      Roger: Because it's a substitution game. You have to remind them that they're missing something from their lives. Everyone's missing something, right?

      Nick: I guess.

      Roger: Trust me. And when they're feeling sufficiently incomplete, you convince them your product is the only thing that can fill the void. So instead of taking steps to deal with their lives, instead of working to root out the real reason for their misery, they go out and buy a stupid looking pair of cargo pants.

    • Crazy credits
      All fur in this film is fake.
    • Connections
      Featured in The 2003 IFP Independent Spirit Awards (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      As I Want You
      Written & Performed by Craig Wedren

      Mixed by Craig Wedren - BMI

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 22, 2002 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Cosa de hombres
    • Filming locations
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Holedigger Films
      • Roger Dodger LLC
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,266,828
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $47,431
      • Oct 27, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,934,497
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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