For “Roger Dodger’s” antihero, an advertising copywriter, the lines between business and pleasure have irrevocably blurred. Campbell Scott’s tour-de-force performance as the date-obsessed Roger is the ...
Embed <iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/828914/828915" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player"> The new ...
Set against the bright lights of Manhattan, a tale which takes a comic, urbane look at the modern male ego at war in the singles scene trenches. Roger Swanson is a hopelessly cynical advertising ...
WHEN WE meet Roger (Campbell Scott), he's holding forth like a riverboat gambler at a table of men and women. But the game isn't poker. Roger's dealing intellectually polished, negative assertions ...
THE LOWDOWN: A womanizing ad executive learns respect for women after a night on the town with his teenage nephew. It doesn't take long to get to know Roger. The minute he opens his mouth and lets ...
Campbell Scott is clearly having a ball playing Roger—a cynical ad executive whose approach to women is a cross between liar’s poker and hostile takeover—and he invites us to relish the sheer audacity ...
Campbell Scott (right) and Jesse Eisenberg. The film won the price for best narrative feature film. By THR Staff Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day 1 hour ago ...
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