Smile
Smile
| 08 April 2005 (USA)
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Introduced to a volunteer opportunity with the Doctor's Gift Program, Katie (Mika Boorem) signs up for a trip to China, where she meets Lin (Yi Ding), a girl with whom she shares a birthday. Lin has a facial deformity that discourages her from ever showing her face, but her friendship with Katie helps her start to see life in a new way.

Reviews
Softwing

Most undeservingly overhyped movie of all time??

Brendon Jones

It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.

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Hayleigh Joseph

This is ultimately a movie about the very bad things that can happen when we don't address our unease, when we just try to brush it off, whether that's to fit in or to preserve our self-image.

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Ortiz

Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.

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SimonJack

"Smile" is five stories in one. It's important to note that this is not a true story. Rather, the credits claim that it's like 80,000 other stories. Some characters are based on real people, others are composites. That's OK. Many books and movies are created thus. I can understand and applaud the purpose of the charitable organization that is doing such good work around the world. And, I can understand how this effort is something that Chicken Soup for the Soul would want to sponsor. But, unfortunately, this film fails on many accounts. To start with, I have problems with some of the values that seem to be accepted by the producers. I suspect that many other viewers may also find such problems. Finally, those of us who follow news around the world will see glaring inconsistencies with what the film shows and the realities in China. The first story is about a spoiled, self-centered teenage girl from a very well-to-do family in California. Another is of a man in China who finds an abandoned newborn girl with a cleft palate and takes her into his family to raise her. The third story is about a worldwide charitable organization, Operation Smile, which helps treat facial deformities of children. The fourth story is about a volunteer program for high school students to serve the group in foreign countries. The fifth story is about the redemption of the spoiled teenager and her friendship with the Chinese girl and her father. The portrayal of the heroine and her family may be spot on. While she is a seemingly nice girl, in truth she's a spoiled only- child and a very self-centered brat. Her parents are no better and round out a very dysfunctional family. One can sense that they each came from a single- child family themselves, where they were used to getting their own way. They never learned to share or to truly care for siblings or others growing up themselves. Just look at these people. They fly off the handle at the least little word they don't like from the other – especially the mother and daughter. That this mom and dad would tolerate the back-talk and yelling of this girl isn't anything I can imagine in any of my family or among friends – and that's a lot of people and families. The modern media and public agenda to the contrary, I don't think most parents today would talk about their daughter using birth control pills and "protecting" herself or being responsible with sex. These parents seem to have a cavalier attitude about sex and their daughter's experiencing it. I don't know any dad, or mom, who would have such an attitude about their daughter. The interest in my widespread circles is one of teaching, and explaining and encouraging teens to wait for the right person in marriage. The next story has a Chinese man finding an abandoned newborn with the cleft palate. This man would have to be a living saint, except for what we see later on. The date for his discovery would be in the late 1980s. China has had a one-child policy since 1978. The Chinese father already had a wife and a son. It would indeed be an extreme act of heroic love to take in an abandoned baby girl. There is no mention of his reporting the baby, so how is it that the family continued for several years without detection? Then, the man's wife leaves with their son because of the man's favoring attention to the girl. The man surely is an exception. Under the one-child policy, many girls are aborted because the Chinese all want sons who will care for parents in old age. So, how could this man let his own son leave him? Again, this much of a contrived story for China just doesn't ring as likely or possible. Too many other aspects of this film are just not believable. The American girl who can't speak or read Chinese, takes off on her own to travel a long way and find a specific tenement home in some distant place? The Chinese man teaching himself and his daughter English, with no other English speakers to learn from? The story of the charitable group is heartwarming, but there is very little of it. Except for the one nurse, there was so little interaction with or involvement of medical people in the hospital. There's just way too much in this movie that isn't plausible. So much so that it really detracts from the film. In summary, my low rating is mostly because of the very implausible plot, a weak script, and only fair acting at best. The idea and the cause it relates to are very good. There have been a number of very good movies in the past decade or so about redemption of young people. But, "Smile" is more of a frown and flop.

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TxMike

This movie is almost an infomercial for the organization of medical professionals who donate their time on periodic good will visits to poor countries to surgically repair babies and young children born with severe facial and mouth deformities.Mika Boorem, who was actually a teenager, plays a character not unlike what she played in 'Blue Crush'. A head-strong teen who always wants to get her way, and doesn't have much empathy for the troubles of others. Here she is Malibu teen Katie who has convinced her mother that it is time to start taking the pill, she thinks she is ready for an intimate relationship with her boyfriend.Half-way across the world in China, born the same day as Katie, is Yi Ding as Lin. She was born with severe facial deformities and was left in a hay field by the parents only to be discovered and raised by a man who wasn't her real dad. Lin grew up ashamed of her face, kept it covered, and didn't socialize.At school back in Malibu is a visionary teacher, Sean Astin as Mr. Matthews. He knows that others have had great experiences by volunteering on a surgical mission trip, and his encouragement is responsible for Katie going to China. Katie learns of Lin, actually looks her up, and convinces her to go to Shanghai and get the surgery. Both teens are changed as a result of the experience.There is a nice 7-minute extra on the DVD featuring real footage of real doctors doing surgeries on real children with deformities. It is a remarkable thing they are doing that makes a remarkable change for the children.

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ltlacey

One, I am not some employee of any production company related to this movie. Second, I have no ulterior motives in raving about the movie. I just found the story very interesting and moving, even if at times the script was a bit contrived. What we have is well-to-do teenager with her own set of problems (arguing parents, boyfriend pushing her to have sex), and then we get a glimpse of the life of a teenager who has not only cultural issues that make her life totally different, but a physical deformity that causes her a lot of hardships. Sometimes those of us who lead a more privileged life forget that for the majority of those on this planet life is not about what TV program to watch, Facebook, and what to wear on a date. This movie was more than just promoting what is a great program (Doctors Without Borders, etc.), but what it is like to be a teenager, and then realizing that one needs to grow up, then doing so.

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parmleyal

The story line of a man's love for an innocent baby he finds with a malformed face and on the opposite side of the world a shallow self centered "valley girl" who shares a birth date with her and ends up making a big difference in both of there lives. What a great and worthy story line. But in this telling the screen writing and/or directing and/or editing is so poor as to take most of the joy out of the story. Linda Hamilton's character goes from understanding mom to wicked witch and back faster than a speeding bullet, and for what purpose? Conflict, conflict, conflict, at the drop of a hat. Katie (The California Girl) and her boyfriend, Katie's Mom and everybody, including the poor lady at the airport check-in counter, Lin's adopted father, who is the nicest, most considerate man alive, and his wife and biological son, all in constant conflict. I really wanted to enjoy a heartwarming story, but the only thing that made me SMILE was when all the hate and fighting were over. There were too many unexplained or illogical events, many of which don't add to the story. My wife and I kept looking at each other and asking ourselves how such a good cast and what should be a great story, could be crapped up so badly.

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