Novocaine

2001 Comedy

In this darkly comic film noir from writer/director David Atkins, Steve Martin revisits dentistry -- an occupation he'd explored 15 years prior, in the camp musical Little Shop of Horrors. Novocaine casts Martin as a much more mild-mannered D.D.S., Dr. Frank Sangster. Engaged to a prim and delicate hygienist, Jean (Laura Dern), Sangster leads a placid, upper-middle class existence, save for the occasional visit from his deadbeat artist brother Harlan (Elias Koteas). But Sangster finds his life turned inside out from the moment the alluring Susan (Helena Bonham Carter) plops down in his reclining vinyl chair: Complaining about her molars, she's really more interested in the refrigerator of narcotics the good dentist keeps on hand for his patients in pain. Once they manage to get Sangster's guard down, Susan and her brother (Scott Caan) rob him blind -- and worse yet, frame him for the theft. When a dead body turns up in Sangster's sleek suburban home, he finds that clearing his name will be a difficult proposition indeed. Novocaine marks the directorial debut of screenwriter Atkins, who first made his mark with the script for Emir Kusturica's oddball cult favorite Arizona Dream (1993). more..

Director: David Atkins

Starring: Steve Martin, Helena Bonham Carter, Laura Dern, Elias Koteas,Scott Caan

Reviews

  • Quite apart from wringing the last molecule of vividness from his freewheeling roster of loose cannons, he brings to his direction of Martin a finesse shared by only a few of the directors who have worked with the comedian-actor.

    Jay Carr - The Boston Globe

    26 April 2013

  • A screwball film noir with a lot of medium laughs and a few great big ones,

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    26 April 2013

  • A funny and constantly surprising exercise in comic tension.

    Rene Rodriguez - Miami Herald

    26 April 2013

  • With Bonham Carter's been-there, done-that performance and a plot that spins out of control, we end up with a movie that you can't quite sink your teeth into.

    Claudia Puig - USA Today

    26 April 2013

  • There are many things wrong with Novocaine, but the film's most gnawing pain is its clodhopper farfetchedness.

    Owen Gleiberman - Entertainment Weekly

    26 April 2013

Awards

No awards