Smoke

  • UK Smoke (more)
Trailer 2

Plots(1)

A group of people's lives intertwine when a New York cigar store manager, Auggie (Keitel), befriends them. Among them is a writer who can't write (Hurt), a reluctant father hiding from his past (Forest Whitaker), a streetwise teen with an unusual identity crisis, and Auggie's long-lost ex-girlfriend (Stockard Channing), who returns with some surprising news! (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (3)

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POMO 

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English Smoke is an indie chill-out conversational film with unnaturally bright interiors and some pleasant (and strange) life stories. I was very pleased by the philosophical dimension of Harvey Keitel’s photo-project and William Hurt’s life story. But the interaction between the young black man and his father played by Forest Whitaker seemed strange to me. And I found Whitaker’s neurotic character almost repulsive. ()

3DD!3 

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English A cute mosaic connecting up stories, either already told or those that take place right in front of us. Each is cloaked in smoke, but still they are heartwarming and you get to like them. It’s a joy to watch the great acting performances and clever outcomes in a movie that makes you think and reflects the period as exactly as Auggie’s camera captures time. The last, Christmas story warms the cockles of your heart. I must go visit grandma at the weekend. If you can't share your secrets with your friends then what kind of friend are you? ()

kaylin 

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English I love conversational films, especially when they are well-made and have something to say. That is exactly the case with the film Smoke. It features wonderfully written and, above all, superbly acted characters, who don't stand out because they lead particularly interesting lives, but simply because they know how to portray their own lives well. Harvey Keitel is incredible when he tells the final story. The depiction of this memory within the closing credits is almost unnecessary because his narration is perfect. ()