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IMDbPro

Rocket Science

  • 2007
  • R
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Anna Kendrick in Rocket Science (2007)
Theatrical Trailer from Picturehouse Entertainment
Play trailer2:24
1 Video
40 Photos
ComedyDrama

Looking for answers to life's big questions, a stuttering boy joins his high school debate team.Looking for answers to life's big questions, a stuttering boy joins his high school debate team.Looking for answers to life's big questions, a stuttering boy joins his high school debate team.

  • Director
    • Jeffrey Blitz
  • Writer
    • Jeffrey Blitz
  • Stars
    • Reece Thompson
    • Anna Kendrick
    • Nicholas D'Agosto
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jeffrey Blitz
    • Writer
      • Jeffrey Blitz
    • Stars
      • Reece Thompson
      • Anna Kendrick
      • Nicholas D'Agosto
    • 58User reviews
    • 71Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    Rocket Science
    Trailer 2:24
    Rocket Science

    Photos40

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    Top cast56

    Edit
    Reece Thompson
    Reece Thompson
    • Hal Hefner
    • (as Reece Daniel Thompson)
    Anna Kendrick
    Anna Kendrick
    • Ginny Ryerson
    Nicholas D'Agosto
    Nicholas D'Agosto
    • Ben Wekselbaum
    Utkarsh Ambudkar
    Utkarsh Ambudkar
    • Ram
    Candace Hammer
    • Townsend Prep Debater
    • (as Candace Burr Scholz)
    Margo Martindale
    Margo Martindale
    • Coach Lumbly
    Vincent Piazza
    Vincent Piazza
    • Earl Hefner
    Denis O'Hare
    Denis O'Hare
    • Doyle Hefner
    Lisbeth Bartlett
    • Juliet Hefner
    Aaron Yoo
    Aaron Yoo
    • Heston
    Virginia House
    Virginia House
    • English Teacher
    • (as Virginia Frank)
    Marilyn Yoblick
    Marilyn Yoblick
    • Plainsboro Lunch Lady
    Maury Ginsberg
    Maury Ginsberg
    • Mr. Lewinsky
    Emily Ginnona
    Emily Ginnona
    • Honoria
    Dionne Audain
    Dionne Audain
    • Abraham Lincoln
    Dan De Luca
    Dan De Luca
    • Stephen Douglas
    • (as Dan DeLuca)
    Michael Kusnir
    Michael Kusnir
    • Flemming
    Steve Park
    Steve Park
    • Judge Pete
    • (as Stephen Park)
    • Director
      • Jeffrey Blitz
    • Writer
      • Jeffrey Blitz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews58

    6.513.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8ekeby

    Smart Dialog, Sharp Performances

    I'm surprised that this film elicits so many negative reviews here. I enjoyed reading the rant by the guy who spells cello "chello." I think that pretty much explains it. Literacy will be required to appreciate this movie.

    This has to be the best dialog in any film ever made with a stutterer as a central character.

    I found the performances letter-perfect; not a false note anywhere. This is a movie where even the bit parts are played by well-cast actors, not producers' pretty boyfriends or girlfriends. I loved the girl in the washroom with the nosebleed, for example. Perfect.

    Rushmore did not come to mind while I watched this film, nor did any of the other "quirky" films named here by other reviewers. But I did think of it as a companion piece to "Welcome to the Dollhouse." Both set in NJ, and both with central characters at the bottom of their school social ranking, and coping with their realities better than one would think.

    I particularly liked the relationship between adults and kids in this film. The adults (parents and teachers) are wise about the kids, and the kids are just as wise about the adults. The tone was just right.
    8oneloveall

    As heartfelt as it is intelligent

    One of last years best scripts and a breakout performance from the natural Reece Thompson ensures Rocket Science is up on 2007's biggest sleepers list. Unlike the overrated Juno, Jeffrey Blitz's stimulating screenplay hardly ever rings hollow, despite the fact some of these high schooler's made that pregnant whippersnapper sound like a three year old. Here though, as unrealistically hyper-articulate as this high school debate team, indie-romance styled dramedy feels, Blitz possesses the rare ability to seamlessly merge it with a whole bunch of tender awkwardness and create something far superior then a wit-fest.

    Encapsulating this neurotic whimsy is the gifted Thompson (amongst other very well casted performances) who like a younger, more accessible Jason Schwartzman, takes an annoyingly exploited trait of stuttering unease and mines it into a tender, thoughtful coming of age characterization that should inspire even the most cynical of introverts.

    Littered with scene after scene of a simply far more perceptive quirk then what Hollywood's continuously dumbed-down interpretations of independent film used to be, Rocket Science blasts off with personality and style to spare.
    10blueyedathena3280

    Rocket Science Makes Perfect Sense

    On the brink of exhaustion after a week at Sundance, I sat down in a comfy plush seat in a theater that was not really a theater, but rather a library converted into a theater. Between the habitual midnight showing and average three movie viewing a day, I had fallen asleep in the last two, (Trust me, I did everything in the book to try and keep myself conscious) and thought this would be the third as I began to slouch down in this sumptuousness of a chair, but suddenly, the catchy music, witty dialog, and stimulating visuals had enlivened me. I was literally on the edge of my seat, hanging on to every word Hal Hefner uttered. It was remarkably fresh, continuously entertaining, and even profoundly deep. But in a good way. Which is quite rare not only in movies, but in life really. It made teenage angst and the mid-life crisis a little lighter, even hilarious. And who would think either would be funny. Anyways, this is quite a memorable tale, leaving you with a feeling of infinity, and the wisdom of approaching the serious things with a bit of humor.
    8lion_and_boar

    best Asian American movie I've seen this year

    Seriously. I have to agree with the writer of the review at the top of the string of reviews. There's insight and brilliance in the script and in the direction. Movies about high school kids will draw comparisons to all the high school films that preceded it, from Hughes to Apatow. Americans, we take our high school years very seriously...especially after we graduate. And we all have our favorite movies that deal with those four years of our lives (mine: "Donnie Darko," "Rushmore," and "Election"). Given time, I think "Rocket Science" will settle somewhere between "Election" and "Napolean Dynamite," for me.

    "Rocket Science" is unique if you're willing to look beyond the surface similarities. Yes, this movie has a young protagonist who wants to overcome the odds to get the girl, with the help of friends, with interference from an antagonistic sibling, and parents who just don't seem to understand. That's practically a classical form by now. Euripides could fill in that outline.

    Already, there are 4 pages of reviews and I can only add this: the roles of the Asian Americans that writer and director Jeffrey Blitz carved out deserve comment. And that comment is: sweet! Astonishing, really. Someone mentioned "Juno" in these reviews and how "Rocket Science" achieved where "Juno" may have fell short. I skipped "Juno" but listened to at least three separate discussions on public radio and on the local AM stations about the Chinese-baby line used in the promotions. I understand that, in the context of the movie, it wasn't so bad. Nothing nearly that clumsy in "Rocket Science."

    Two Asian American actors get speaking roles and their lines are often hilarious: Stephen Park as Judge Pete who is jovial for no good reason and Aaron Yoo as his son, Heston, who crosses that line from admiring muscly dudes to really admiring them. The roles are clearly written as Asian American roles. In fact, father and son are identified, specifically, as Korean American, highlighted by Judge Pete's wailing of "ummah" in a scene where the judge is not so jovial. Blitz does wonderful work in identifying the characters as Asian American while not announcing their scenes as "The Asian Scenes." The jokes come, but not at their expense. There's a funny line about the casserole they bring to dinner which I won't spoil for those who haven't seen the movie yet. The exchange says more about the mother, aptly played by Lisbeth Bartlett, and her appetite for the exotic than the Asian-ness of her guests.

    Later in the film, the protagonist and Heston pair up in a speech competition, and employing a technique suggested by his school counselor to quell the stammer, Hal decides to affect an accent. The scene is brilliantly written, directed and edited. The last time I was surprised by how loud I laughed in a movie was when Bart had a full-frontal scene in "The Simpsons." There's also a scene with that same counselor speaking from home to Hal on the phone. There is a shot that includes his significant other who is Asian. It's uncanny (or is it uncannily canny). The casting: she's a good looking woman and, by most measures, he did better than his station or his looks. The composition: she is positioned in a way that suggests detachment and self-absorption, showing no interest in the conversation. She's in a bathrobe, trimming her toenails (or something similar) on the couch, displaying a level of comfort, in particular with her body, many Asians would find immodest and not-so-classy. A director with less skill would have had any Asian actress fiddling around in the background. Jeffrey Blitz creates something as precise as something Wes Anderson put on film, without the elements becoming ornamental.

    Yes, there are jokes in "Rocket Science," but it's not the joke-gag-joke rabbit punches of Apatow and his bunch and none of that numbing repetitive dissonance of their adult language spoken by what we're supposed to believe are goofy high school kids. They write as if they are haunted by moments from their high school years in which they could have uttered something clever and snappy but the words came only after dinner. Another memorable scene in "Rocket Science:" Hal visits the principal's office at a private school, and while he waits there, he discusses 2nd base with a girl that could be a delinquent. The girl's final remark is hilarious. And you believe it is something that could be said by a girl who was sent to the principal's office.
    6Benjamin-M-Weilert

    High school debate is not rocket science.

    Quite the misleading title, as this movie is -not- about rocket science. It's more about high school debate. But it's not even really about that either. Maybe I've just missed the point of this movie entirely, but I certainly do know that if life and love -were- rocket science, I'd be able to understand it much more than I do now.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Anna Kendrick (Ginny Ryerson) and Utkarsh Ambudkar (Ram) appeared together in Pitch Perfect (2012)
    • Goofs
      When Hal first enters the Luis Dry Cleaners in "Trenton," a Baltimore City Police van drives past behind him.
    • Quotes

      Hal Hefner: There's a cello in your house now.

    • Connections
      Featured in HBO First Look: Rocket Science (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      The Blob
      Written by Mack David and Burt Bacharach

      Performed by Guy Klucevsek and David Garland

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 28, 2007 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Khoa học tên lửa
    • Filming locations
      • Baltimore, Maryland, USA
    • Production companies
      • B&W Films
      • Duly Noted
      • HBO Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $6,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $714,943
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $58,536
      • Aug 12, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $763,578
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 41m(101 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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