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| The Secret Lives of Dentists is both well written and well acted. It values marriage. At the end, all is not well, but there is hope. The damage done to teeth by life can be repaired. Perhaps the damage to this marriage can be as well. |

(2002) Film Review |
| This page was created on September 2, 2003
This page was last updated on
September 2, 2003
—Review
—About this Film
—Spiritual Connections
—Forum
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| CREDITS |
| Directed by
Alan Rudolph
Writers
Screenplay by Craig Lucas
Novella by Jane Smiley (The Age of Grief)
Producers
Bruce Cowen ... executive producer
Jonathan Filley ... co-producer
Martin Garvey ... executive producer
Michael Lauer ... executive producer
David Newman ... executive producer
Campbell Scott ... producer
George VanBuskirk ... producer
Cast - in credits order
Campbell Scott ... David Hurst
Denis Leary ... Slater
Robin Tunney ... Laura
Peter Samuel ... Larry
Hope Davis ... Dana Hurst
Jon Patrick Walker ... Mark
Gianna Beleno ... Lizzie Hurst
Lydia Jordan ... Stephanie Hurst
Cassidy Hinkle ... Leah Hurst
Adele D'Man ... Carol
Kathleen Kinhan ... Virgin
Sara Lerch ... Virgin
Lori Mirabel ... Virgin
Mark Ethan ... Conductor
Flora Martínez ... Female Patient
J. Tucker Smith ... Handsome Patient
Kevin Carroll ... Dr. Danny
Kate Clinton ... Elaine
Herbert Ade¹ ... Male Patient
Aisha De Haas ... Policewoman
Susie Essman ... Nurse
Other credited cast listed alphabetically
Michael Fewx ... Dental Student
Original Music by Gary DeMichele
Cinematographer: by Florian Ballhaus
Editor: Andy Keir
MPAA: Rated R for sexuality and language.
Runtime: 105 min
For rating reasons, go to FILMRATINGS.COM, and MPAA.ORG.
Parents, please refer to PARENTALGUIDE.ORG |
| TRAILERS AND CLIPS |
| Trailer:
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Clip: Dana's Affair
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Clip: My Filing Came Out
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Clip: Will You Be Long?
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Clip: Fever
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| SYNOPSIS |
"Teeth outlast everything. Death is nothing to a tooth. Life is what destroys teeth."
In a blend of humor and realism, award winning director Alan Rudolph (Afterglow, Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle) employs this dental observation as a powerful metaphor about marriage and human relationships. The Secret Lives of Dentists tells the story of Dr. Dave Hurst (Campbell Scott), who shares a private clinical practice with his bright and attractive partner and wife Dr. Dana (Hope Davis). Step by step, together,
they have created their "dream life," raising three beautiful children, in their home and country house. But they are also opposites. Meditative and methodical, he is deeply attached to the family they have built. She, more passionate and spontaneous, is still seeking life's precious adventures.
Dana, an amateur soprano, pours her heart into a once in a lifetime opportunity to perform Verdi with a professional Opera company. Following the performance, she tells her husband through tears, she wishes she could sing the music forever. Dave suspects she is crying for a different reason. Unknown to her, Dave believes he has recently witnessed his wife in an intimate exchange with another man at the opera house.
Emotionally repressed by nature, Dave's jealousy causes him to fantasize conversations with his most difficult patient Slater (Denis Leary), allowing him to avoid confronting his wife. Slater, a hard living musician with a toothache, having recently been ejected by his own wife, adds a running commentary on Dave's personal conversations, churning up the dentist's deepest insecurities and pushing Dave to the more primal side
of his nature.
During an untimely family dilemma, when the entire household succumbs to a raging flu, Dave runs himself ragged, until fevers die down and he relaxes, believing that family equilibrium has been restored. That night, Dana does not come home. Slater goads the quiet dentist toward the brink of revenge.
The Secret Lives of Dentists prods at the complexities, paradoxes, and tender beauties of marriage. Illuminated by the performances of the film's stars Campbell Scott (Roger Dodger), Hope Davis (About Schmidt), The Secret Lives of Dentists is an insightful and complete human portrait of a couple caught in the mistakes two people can make. Denis Leary (Jesus' Son, The Thomas Crown Affair) and Robin Tunney (The Wedding Party,
Vertical Limit) round out the cast of this universal tale of a perfect couple at a crossroads in their relationship. The screenplay is based on "The Age of Grief," the best selling novella by Pulitzer Prize winner Jane Smiley, adapted for screen by celebrated playwright and screenwriter, Craig Lucas (Longtime Companion, Prelude to a Kiss).
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Review by
DARREL MANSON
Pastor, Artesia Christian Church, Artesia, CA
http://netministries.org/see/churches/ch01198
Darrel has an incredible love and interest in the cinematic arts. His reviews usually include independent and significantly important film. |
We live in a world where marriages are as likely to fail as to be for life. Everyone knows that going into marriage. Most people assume their marriage will be one that lasts a lifetime. Marriage seems pretty easy in the midst of the excitement of being in love, starting a new home, a new family. But really marriage is much harder than those early days.
In The Secret Lives of Dentists, we look into the marriage of David and Dana Hurst, both dentists, who have been married ten years. They have three daughters. All seems to be going well for them. Except that all the years and the changes that have come are beginning to take their toll. It's not that they no longer love one another. But things just aren't the same.
We see all this from David's point of view. We begin hearing a voice over about teeth and how indestructible they are -- even the decay of death doesn't destroy teeth. What damages teeth is what living does to them. We can extend this to marriage. In tux and flowing white gown, a marriage seems indestructible. Those that last to the death of one spouse are usually valued even after their time together
is over. But the strain of marriage is in the living of it.
David accidentally sees something that makes him suspect that his wife is unfaithful. From that point his insecurities take over. Everything she does makes him suspicious. He frets over her trips to the store, or her suggestion of taking the girls to their cabin. He fantasizes of what is happening and what he should do through conversations with a hallucination version of a particularly obnoxious patient
(played excellently by Denis Leary).
Although we are focused on David's insecurities, we see bits of the insecurities in Dana's life as well. There is a lot of Mars and Venus going on here, but both are feeling somewhat abandoned by the other, even as they share their practice, their home and their bed.
We see how their insecurities are becoming the driving force in their relationship. David won't bring the issue to the surface because to do so would lead to the consequences of knowing: separation, divorce, custody. So, because he wants his marriage to survive, he keeps quiet. In fact, his silence is more of a threat to the welfare of the marriage than the possible affair.
The Secret Lives of Dentists is both well written and well acted. I did get a bit tired of the trumpet playing alter ego, but he does add a grittiness to the film.
This is a film that values marriage. At the end, all is not well, but there is hope. The damage done to teeth by life can be repaired. Perhaps the damage to this marriage can be as well. |
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