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Nobel Son
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Nobel Son (2007) More at IMDbPro »

Photos (see all 9 | slideshow) Videos (see all 2)
A young chemistry student (Hatosy) throws a wrench into the existence of Nobel Prize-winning scientist Eli Michaelson (Rickman) by first kidnapping his son (Greenberg).
Barkley Michaelson is in a deep life rut. He's struggling to finish his PhD thesis when his father, the learned Eli Michaelson...

Overview

User Rating:
7.8/10   608 votes
Director:
Randall Miller
Writers (WGA):
Jody Savin (written by) &
Randall Miller (written by)
Release Date:
5 December 2008 (USA) more
Genre:
Comedy | Crime | Drama more
Plot:
Barkley Michaelson is in a deep life rut. He's struggling to finish his PhD thesis when his father, the learned Eli Michaelson... more | add synopsis
NewsDesk:
(36 articles)
Is 'Delgo' the Biggest Flop of All Time?
 (From Cinematical. 17 December 2008, 7:45 AM, PST)

Box Office: The Day the Box Office Stood Still
 (From Cinematical. 10 December 2008, 2:03 PM, PST)

User Comments:
Nobel Son Movie Review from The Massie Twins more

Cast

 (Credited cast)

Alan Rickman ... Eli Michaelson

Bryan Greenberg ... Barkley Michaelson

Shawn Hatosy ... Thaddeus James

Mary Steenburgen ... Sarah Michaelson

Bill Pullman ... Max Mariner

Eliza Dushku ... City Hall

Danny DeVito ... Gastner

Ted Danson ... Harvey Parrish

Ernie Hudson ... Lasasso

Tracey Walter ... Simon Ahrens

Lindy Booth ... Beth

Kevin West ... Jaundice
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Kirk Baily ... Wil Cavalere

Dawn Balkin ... Stewardess

Greg Collins ... Foreman

Reid Collums ... Delivery Guy
Lucy DeVito

Tiffany Downey ... Model

Bennett Dunn ... Bartender

Mark Famiglietti ... Officer Relyea

Mary Pat Gleason ... Ruby
Brendon Graham ... Soldier
Joyce Guy ... Eileen Moses

Larry Hankin ... Dr. Polaczek

Juliette Jeffers ... Claire

Matthew Kimbrough ... Deacon

Hal B. Klein ... Tully's Guy

Joe Koons ... Poet
Valerie Long ... Excrement Woman

Wayne Lopez ... Cabbie

Danika Quinn ... Opera Singer (as Danika Osterman)

Dean Rader-Duval ... Ernie

Johanna Torell ... Analea

Matt Winston ... Clifford

Avis Wrentmore ... Model
more
Create a character page for: ?

Additional Details

MPAA:
Rated R for some violent gruesome images, language and sexuality.
Runtime:
110 min
Country:
USA
Language:
English
Color:
Color
Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 more
Certification:
USA:R
MOVIEmeter: ?
V 7% since last week why?

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Though Mary Steenburgen and Ted Danson are married in real life, their characters never interact, Danson's role being little more than a cameo. more
Goofs:
Boom mic visible: In the scene where the reporter is giving a report from the families' front yard, a studio boom mike is clearly visible even though the reporter is speaking into a microphone. more
Quotes:
Eli Michaelson: If anyone in this room ever doubted my intellectual superiority, you may now formally kiss my fine white ass. more

FAQ

Why has the release date been pushed back so many times?
Is there an official website?
How much sex, violence, and profanity are in this movie?
more
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful:-
Nobel Son Movie Review from The Massie Twins, 4 December 2008
6/10
Author: joel massie (GoneWithTheTwins) from www.GoneWithTheTwins.com

Nobel Son is not an easy film to foretell, and with its constant genre-morphing subplots, psychotic characters and unordered narrative, it will keep you guessing all the way through. This escape from convention is not always a good thing – the first half hour of the film tries the patience and is so disjointed and seemingly nongermane that it's impossible to predict the relationships of the bizarre events. Once you've made it to the second act, pieces start to fall into place and realizations are hinted upon, but it doesn't stop there. More twists, more complexities and one too many unlikely coincidences might make you think twice before feeling satisfied by this suspenseful drama/dark comedy/horror/mystery thriller.

The opening scene consists of an alarmingly brutal thumb-severing bit of violence that perfectly paves the way for the unpredictable and mind-boggling adventure that follows. Eli Michaelson (Alan Rickman, in a wonderfully despicable role that he continually excels at) has just been announced as the winner of the Nobel Prize for his stellar work in chemistry. He's egotistical, eccentric, uncaring and obnoxious, and has been handing out higher grades in exchange for sex with his young female students. His son Barkley (Bryan Greenberg) is struggling with his PhD thesis on cannibalism (his opening line of narration quotes Michel De Montaigne, a 16th century philosopher: "There is more barbarity in eating a man alive than in eating him dead."). He also struggles with an awkward romance with City Hall (Eliza Dushku), a morbid poet and artist with her own bountiful measure of oddness.

Eli's wife Sarah (Mary Steenburgen) is a renowned forensic psychiatrist who is fancied by Max Mariner (Bill Pullman), a somewhat crafty detective. On the morning of the family's trip to Sweden to attend the Nobel Prize party, Barkley is kidnapped and held for a $2 million ransom; the money awarded to Eli. From here, backstabbing, jealousy, lust and greed collide in nonstop twists and turns, proving that once again nothing is what it seems.

Every character in Nobel Son is devious, shrewd, freakish, obsessive compulsive or morally flawed (most often all of those combined) making it difficult to side with any of the numerous antiheros. The first plot surprise is unique and smart, but then the filmmakers try too hard and it becomes unnecessarily convoluted. This is where the unexpected genre confusion comes into play, at times heading down the path of taut mystery thriller, always mixing in dark, subtle humor (and blatant grossness with poetry reading from "Death By Drain-O" and verses involving bathing in excrement), and eventually borrowing from films like David Fincher's Seven, Body Heat, Wild Things and even Mission: Impossible.

Nobel Son is definitely a shock to the system, an unconventional film that reminds us of the chaos of those rare movies that breathe life into the most peculiar characters and situations. It's not perfect and its originality only comes from the amount of time that has passed since a movie like this was presented, but it's certainly worth a try.

- Mike Massie

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