Charlie Bartlett
A rich kid becomes the self-appointed psychiatrist, dispensing therapeutic advice and prescription drugs to the student body at his new high school in order to become popular.
23 October 1987, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
4 June 1951, Porcupine, Ontario, Canada
29 August 1986, Thornhill, Ontario, Canada
19 May 1939, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
24 July 1986, Lindsay, Ontario, Canada
1990, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
4 April 1987, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
13 June 1986, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
9 July 1981, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
22 November 1983, Palm Springs, California, USA
12 October 1983, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
4 April 1965, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
7 November 1989, Thornhill, Ontario, Canada
16 January 1987, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
28 March 1958, Portage La Prairie, Manitoba, Canada
October 18, 2008
Lightweight fare, but a pleasant outing.
October 18, 2008
Charlie Bartlett plays it too safe.
September 04, 2009
There are sweet moments, and there are funny moments, but it all just becomes so eye-rollingly calculated that it's hard to appreciate.
February 22, 2008
Those waiting for the arrival of the next Juno may want to skip Charlie Bartlett, a relentlessly earnest teen film about a 17-year-old misfit who's been tossed out of one prep school after another for bad behavior.
April 28, 2011
Writer Gustin Nash and director Jon Poll have their Ferris Bueller thing working perfectly, with a few 2008 wrinkles.
February 22, 2008
Imagine an R-rated Ferris Bueller with only the most annoying parts of the younger Matthew Broderick's screen persona emphasized and you'll draw a bead on Bartlett.
February 22, 2008
Charlie Bartlett is a refreshingly entertaining character study that refuses to dumb down its youthful cast or bury their concerns in service of a catchy soundtrack.
October 18, 2008
The promising themes peter out as the film loses direction, though, and Bartlett is neither sympathetic enough to root for nor dumb enough to laugh at.
February 22, 2008
The characters remain halfway between genuine comic creations and realistic individuals, and the whole narrative feels artificial, stuck in the tension between being a morality play and a freewheeling comedy.
February 22, 2008
Watching Charlie Bartlett only makes Wes Anderson's work seem more accomplished by comparison, because it underscores that thin line separating the agreeably fanciful from the overbearingly precious.
February 22, 2008
The movie as a whole is a sweet pill to swallow.

