|





|

Warren
Schmidt (Jack Nicholson) has arrived at several of life's crossroads all
at the same time. To begin with, he is retiring from a lifetime of service
as an actuary for Woodmen of the World Insurance Company, and he feels
utterly adrift. Furthermore, his only daughter Jeannie (Hope Davis) is
about to marry a boob. And his wife Helen (June Squibb) dies suddenly
after 42 years of marriage.
With no job, no wife, and no family, Warren is desperate to find something
meaningful in his thoroughly unimpressive life. He sets out on a journey
of self-discovery, exploring his roots across Nebraska in the 35-foot
motor home in which he had planned to drive around the country with his
late wife. His ultimate destination is Denver, where he hopes to bridge
the gulf between himself and his somewhat estranged daughter by arriving
early to help with her wedding preparations. Unfortunately, he hates the
groom-to- be Randall (Dermot Mulroney), a profoundly mediocre, mediocre,
underachieving waterbed salesman. To make matters worse, Warren is appalled
by the free-spirited nature and boorish behavior of his soon-to-be in-laws
(Kathy Bates and Howard Hesseman). Warren grows swiftly convinced that
his new purpose in life is to stop his daughter's marriage.
During this darkly comic and painful odyssey, Warren details his adventures
and shares his observations with an unexpected new friend and confessor
- - Ndugu Umbo, a six-year-old Tanzanian orphan whom he sponsors for $22
a month through an organization that advertises on TV. From these long
letters filled with a lifetime of things unsaid, Warren begins -- perhaps
for the first time -- to glimpse himself and the life he has lived.
|