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Get Smart

Get Smart

Saving the world...and loving it.

6.2 / 1020081h 50m

Synopsis

When members of the nefarious crime syndicate KAOS attack the U.S. spy agency Control and the identities of secret agents are compromised, the Chief has to promote hapless but eager analyst Maxwell Smart to field agent. He is partnered with veteran and capable Agent 99, the only spy whose cover remains intact. Can they work together to thwart the evil world-domination plans of KAOS and its crafty operative?

Genre: Action, Comedy, Thriller

Status: Released

Director: Peter Segal

Website: http://getsmartmovie.warnerbros.com/

Main Cast

Steve Carell

Steve Carell

Maxwell Smart

Anne Hathaway

Anne Hathaway

Agent 99

Dwayne Johnson

Dwayne Johnson

Agent 23

Alan Arkin

Alan Arkin

The Chief

Terence Stamp

Terence Stamp

Siegfried

James Caan

James Caan

The President

Bill Murray

Bill Murray

Agent 13

Patrick Warburton

Patrick Warburton

Hymie

Terry Crews

Terry Crews

Agent 91

David Koechner

David Koechner

Larabee

Trailer

User Reviews

The Movie Mob

**Get Smart unleashes Steve Carrell's comedic brilliance and makes it one of the most entertaining and hilarious spy films of all time.** Get Smart is hilarious. Just good clean, hilarious fun. Steve Carrell is in his sweet spot with all kinds of physical comedy and side-splitting sarcasm. This movie feels every bit like a spy comedy starring Michael Scott from the Office, except this time with a much bigger budget than Threat Level Midnight. I don't know how the cast could keep a straight face with Steve Carrell's performance as outrageous and entertaining as it was. Anne Hathaway was an excellent partner reacting to Carrell's nonsense with many of her own clever moments. Having watched re-runs of the original TV show with my grandparents growing up, it was easy to see how the movie honored the show's spirit while increasing the budget, effects, and laughs. Director Peter Segal has a resume filled with goofy films and several of which involve espionage and law enforcement, making him the perfect director for a movie like this. Get Smart's clean humor allows the whole family to enjoy its entertaining plot and dorky lovable characters. Steve Carrell makes Get Smart a comedy I will recommend and rewatch again and again.

Andre Gonzales

Kind of a weird type 007 like movie but really funny. Anne Hathaway is really hot in this movie too.

JPRetana

To say that Get Smart (2008) gets dumb is a painfully obvious joke, yet one that zeroes in on what’s wrong with this film. What’s to gain from dumbing down a TV show that’s already sillier than silly? And not just dumbing it down but filthing it up. The phrase “ungrateful whore” has no place whatsoever in a Get Smart story, not even as an example of things people say but don’t really mean. It’s not that the words can’t be funny. The “roses are red, violets are blue, f*** you, whore” line from 500 Days of Summer is hilarious. It’s all about context. The makers of this Get Smart film adaptation thought that bringing the show’s humor into the 21st century meant saying the kind of things that a mid-to-late-1960s network sitcom couldn’t say, but they never once stopped to consider whether the TV series would have said those things even if it could have. Maybe it’s just me, but shouldn’t early 2000s comedy be more sophisticated than its second-half-of-the-20th-century counterpart, not less? Some films expect you to find fat people intrinsically funny; Get Smart expects us to find the idea that someone used to be fat at some indeterminate point in the past before the events of the movie inherently amusing. Actually, Get Smart also expects us to find fat people funny, especially when they’re dancing with or being dry-humped by someone who used to be fat etc., etc. The special effects from the show have also aged better than the movie’s. The cone of silence was funny because it was a physical prop that looked as cumbersome as it was supposed to be, as opposed to a crudely rendered computer-generated visual effect that was digitally added in post-production. We can tell the characters are surrounded by nothing but air, so why even bother? Characterization is the icing on the bull** cake. I know Steve Carell always plays the same character, but never does that become more apparent than when he’s riding someone else’s one-trick pony. He kind of looks like Don Adams, but Maxwell Smart he ain’t. Maxwell Smart does not shoot people dead. I don’t care if the bad guy is Hitler himself — that s* don’t fly. They might as well have had Dwayne Johnson play the lead — and why not? They already had Anne Hathaway doing 99, and she is to Barbara Feldon what The Rock is to both Don Adams and Steve Carell.