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IMDbPro

I Smile Back

  • 2015
  • R
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
5.9K
YOUR RATING
Sarah Silverman in I Smile Back (2015)
Trailer for I Smile Back
Play trailer1:47
25 Videos
86 Photos
DramaMysteryRomance

Addicted to drugs and alcohol, a housewife's self-destructive behavior starts to take its toll on her husband and two young children.Addicted to drugs and alcohol, a housewife's self-destructive behavior starts to take its toll on her husband and two young children.Addicted to drugs and alcohol, a housewife's self-destructive behavior starts to take its toll on her husband and two young children.

  • Director
    • Adam Salky
  • Writers
    • Paige Dylan
    • Amy Koppelman
  • Stars
    • Sarah Silverman
    • Josh Charles
    • Skylar Gaertner
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    5.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Adam Salky
    • Writers
      • Paige Dylan
      • Amy Koppelman
    • Stars
      • Sarah Silverman
      • Josh Charles
      • Skylar Gaertner
    • 42User reviews
    • 53Critic reviews
    • 59Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 7 nominations total

    Videos25

    I Smile Back
    Trailer 1:47
    I Smile Back
    I Smile Back Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:47
    I Smile Back Official Trailer
    I Smile Back Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:47
    I Smile Back Official Trailer
    Now Im Better
    Clip 0:51
    Now Im Better
    Double Park
    Clip 1:59
    Double Park
    Daddy Issues
    Clip 0:56
    Daddy Issues
    I Smile Back: Double Park
    Clip 1:59
    I Smile Back: Double Park

    Photos86

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    + 82
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    Top cast50

    Edit
    Sarah Silverman
    Sarah Silverman
    • Laney Brooks
    Josh Charles
    Josh Charles
    • Bruce Brooks
    Skylar Gaertner
    Skylar Gaertner
    • Eli Brooks
    Anneliese Carter
    Anneliese Carter
    • Janey Brooks
    • (as Shayne Coleman)
    Nick Taylor
    Nick Taylor
    • Guard
    Mia Barron
    Mia Barron
    • Susan
    Thomas Sadoski
    Thomas Sadoski
    • Donny
    Sean Reda
    • Henry
    Cynthia Darlow
    Cynthia Darlow
    • Mrs. Kosinski
    Kristin Griffith
    Kristin Griffith
    • Nurse Pauline
    Terry Kinney
    Terry Kinney
    • Dr. Page
    Clark Jackson
    Clark Jackson
    • Mr. Odesky
    Brian Koppelman
    Brian Koppelman
    • David Blackman
    Emma Ishta
    Emma Ishta
    • Katrina
    Oona Laurence
    Oona Laurence
    • Daisy
    Chris Sarandon
    Chris Sarandon
    • Roger
    Michael Sharits
    Michael Sharits
    • Bartender
    • (as Mike Sharits)
    Mia Katigbak
    • Mrs. Mattingly
    • Director
      • Adam Salky
    • Writers
      • Paige Dylan
      • Amy Koppelman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews42

    6.25.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7cosmo_tiger

    A performance that Silverman just nails but a movie that tries too hard to push its agenda, without needing to.

    "Don't you want to be happy?" Laney Brooks (Silverman) is a mother, wife, and depressed drug addict/alcoholic. She is happy when she is taking care of her kids, but when she is alone she doesn't know how to cope with life and it begins to affect every aspect of her life. She tries rehab and confronting her past in an effort to cure herself. This is not a happy movie, at all. Let me just open with that. Sarah Silverman delivers an Oscar worthy performance and the movie is worth watching just for that. The movie itself though tries to just force its subject down your throat and ends up becoming to "messagey" to have the impact it wants. That is a real problem because if they backed off on trying to show how bad things can get and just relied on Silverman's performance it would have had more of an impact. Overall, a performance that Silverman just nails but a movie that tries too hard to push its agenda, without needing to. I give this a B-.
    7lucasnochez

    TIFF40 2015 Film Review: I Smile Back

    One of the most fascinating and wholly satisfying moments of Hollywood cinema is being present during that moment when a prominent and famous comedy actor transitions from their comfortable, recognizable and iconic genre to that of a raw and unglamorous dramatic role. Luckily for us, such is the case for the quick witted, dirtied tongue comedy actress Sarah Silverman, in her latest film I Smile Back.

    Silverman, who completely transforms her usual charm and infamous devilish smile in favour of Laney Brooks, is revelatory as a woman who suffers from a chemical imbalance and deep rooted physiological issues that greatly affect the people she loves most around her.

    The self-destructive archetype is not uncommon in the American indie film scene, yet, Silverman brings a new high to a character relishing in the ultimate lows.

    Supported by her loving insurance selling husband Bruce Brooks (Josh Charles) and her adorable children Eli (Skylar Gaetner) and Janey (Shayne Coleman), Laney is a ticking time bomb of insecurity, trouble and instability. Regardless of their efforts to induct Laney into rehabilitation for her drug use, her obvious daddy issues and secret double life as a violent, punishment seeking nymphomaniac, Laney tries over and over again to fit in without much success.

    I Smile Back, a novel by Amy Koppelman, written for the screen by Koppelman and Paige Dylan, is the ultimate Silverman shedding her comedy skin drama vehicle. Every aspect of the film is held together, driven forward and rewarded by the strong performance of Silverman. Whether she's on the floor tripping out, cutting the crusts off her children's peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, or finding solace in a wellness centre, Silverman's role unabashedly demands our attention. Silverman's performance is a big smile and hit in the right direction for a comedy actress no one ever took seriously before.

    The film itself, directed by Adam Salky, has its glimmers of interesting commentaries that are mostly left unexplored and empty. The possibility of Laney's medical imbalance being passed on to her eldest son is one of the few directions that the film takes that the audience is surely interested in. Eli, who begins to show very similar character traits, including flinching eyes, and some signs during a piano recital, are thwarted by Laney's passion to failure. Not that we are complaining, but I Smile Back is one example of a film where its runtime could have extended a bit longer to blossom these narrative possibilities.

    I Smile Back is a daunting character piece on just how much someone is willing (or able) to screw up every aspect of their lives, despite having the most amazing and supportive people around them. Salky, who balances many engrossing images of filth and despicable behaviour by Laney, does a masterful job of juxtaposing beautiful scenes of family when Laney seems to be rehabilitated, including a fantastic family scene involving a cake and some candles.

    While the light reminds on, its dim and dark presence seems to overshadow the film as a whole from beginning to end. I Smile Back is a film that allows audiences to face their own personal terrors and allowing yourself to get what you want from them. The feature is a personal reflection of the things we want to see in ourselves, and the disgusting character traits we can help but ignore.

    Lacey's character goes through the crossroads, literally and figuratively, in calmness and in a frenzy. Like a whirlwind, Silverman is a tycoon of raw and fleshy emotion that isn't usually expected for a comedienne's first time dramatic role.

    With an impressive supporting cast that includes The Newsroom's Thomas Sadoski, Terry Kinney as a very real and impressive therapist who delivers some of the best and most quote worthy lines of the film, I Smile Back is a film worth smiling for, despite its heavy handed and opaque exterior. Sadly, Charles is highly underutilized as Laney's husband and never given his due time. Instead, Charles is just left giving his best impression of Keanu Reeves and serves as a dull supporting character to the vivaciously catastrophic Laney.

    Beauty is a hard theme to find in I Smile Back, yet, as Laney's therapist reassures her in her early stages of her recovery, "Every moment of beauty fades…but, there's more and more and more of those moments. You just need to be alive to see them". Dark, depressing and sickened by sadness, I Smile Back may break your heart, but Silverman's performance will have you smiling back from ear to ear in utter satisfaction.
    6JPMDatIMDB

    Well Acted but Not My Cup of Tea

    Very hard to watch, like Silver Linings Playbook but with less mania and fewer extremes. This is actually a plus, compared to SLP: her weaknesses lurk deeper beneath a surface of normalcy.

    Excellent performances will appeal to an audience of actors while a relationship-laden story line will appeal to an audience of script writers.

    Normally I am drawn to character studies as I have a strong appreciation for films that leave you caring about the characters and what happens to them. Somehow though, this time I find I can't recommend this film to my non-actor/non-scriptwriter friends. Maybe it rang so true, so plausible, so "normal," that the discomfort of watching these lives unfold outweighed the excellent performances of the players.
    10carletonbrown

    Significant

    Movies can teach us about life- When I was a teenager I watched (experienced) Days of Wine and Roses. Jack Lemon was a great comedian, but his serious dramatic performance probably turned me and others away from becoming alcoholic.

    I've always enjoyed Sarah Silverman's strong comedy which is grounded in hard reality. We laugh because we see truth in new ways.

    Stephen King could not create a more wrenchingly emotional story about the horror of personal depression. And the danger of deceit, anger and unrelenting despair. There are things in life that can't be controlled and the real horror is when they come from inside us.

    Sarah Silverman's professional dramatic performance is magnificent. I can't wait for more from her- drama or comedy or both.
    8BigCinnamon

    Will hit close to home for a lot of people

    I came into watching 'I Smile Back' having recently come out of a relationship with a woman suffering from severe depression, both having younger children from previous relationships. I was aware of her depression right from the start and it wasn't an issue as it never manifested, up until the last 5-6 months that is. For the 85 minutes this film played, it was like I was watching my life played out by Josh Charles and my partners by Sarah Silverman. Almost perfectly Adam Salky's adaptation of Amy Koppelman's semi-biographical novel highlights and encapsulates the rigors and devastation depression can have on someone's life and the loved ones around them.

    As the film goes on and you are rooting for Silverman's character to get it together, get healthy, and be happy; the most common questions that keep reoccurring (as in my own experience) are how much is depression to blame for the erratic behavior, the self-destruction, the poor life choices, the hurting of others? Where does the depression end and the person begin? What should be forgiven and what cannot be? Coming from a position of clear bias and sympathy for the husband, I 100% related to being in that position that he is doing everything he can to help her, he clearly loves her and wants his family to be happy together. Often, love and good intentions are not enough in these scenarios, and decisions need to be made about whether to keep fighting in the hope things get better or to let it go so it doesn't destroy everyone. 'I Smile Back' really balances these questions so there's no clear right answers.

    I was a little wary initially of Sarah Silverman being in the title role. Even with her previous serious roles I still felt that in your face, over-the-top personality wanting to burst out. Not in this. She nails it, and really makes you feel every emotional high and low. Unlucky not to be recognized by the Academy this year.

    My only criticism is something which I rarely ever say about movies, is that I wish it was longer. I think the affect and anxiety that his mother's depression had on the eldest boy needed to be explored even more. We only get a very surface level of symptoms and afflictions of the child, and it would have been fascinating to get more on what affect it was having in his and his sister's life. I would have also liked a little more of a POV perspective of the husband and how he handled everything.

    Overall, a very realistic and relatable projection of a debilitating and devastating condition.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      When Time magazine asked her about her nude scenes, Sarah Silverman said "I never was naked in anything until I was 40, and now I'm naked in everything! I was never the sexy girl in a big-budget movie, and now I'm just me! I'm allowed to be naked and say, 'This is my human shell, that's all it's supposed to be.' Maybe it's partly that I love being vulnerable and comedy comes easier to me; I'm almost an exhibitionist."
    • Quotes

      Laney: Nobody tells you that it's terrifying to love something so much.

    • Connections
      Featured in Conan: Sarah Silverman/Paige/Megan Gailey (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Vintage
      Written and Performed by Bei Ru

      Published by Musa Ler Music (ASCAP)

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    FAQ20

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 6, 2015 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bakıp Gülümserim
    • Filming locations
      • Broadway Tavern, 8 Broadway, Malverne, Long Island, New York, USA(location)
    • Production companies
      • Egoli Tossell Pictures
      • Koppelman/Levien
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $495,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $58,738
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $15,758
      • Oct 25, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $63,373
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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