Trailer

Smooth Talk

Runtime
1hr 32mins
Directed by
Joyce Chopra
Featuring
Laura Dern, Treat Williams, Mary Kay Place
Body

Through our Virtual Screening Room, you can rent films curated by the Coolidge team, while helping to support the Coolidge during this unprecedented time.

Suspended between carefree youth and the harsh realities of the adult world, a teenage girl experiences an unsettling awakening in this haunting vision of innocence lost. Based on Joyce Carol Oates’ celebrated short story “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” and produced for PBS’s American Playhouse, the narrative debut from director Joyce Chopra features a revelatory breakout performance from Laura Dern as Connie, the fifteen-year-old black sheep of her family whose summertime idyll of beach trips, mall hangouts, and innocent flirtations is shattered by an encounter with a mysterious stranger (a memorably menacing Treat Williams).

Winner of the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance, Smooth Talk captures the thrill and terror of adolescent sexual exploration as it transforms the ingredients of a standard coming of age portrait into something altogether more troubling and profound.

watch now

Plus, director Joyce Chopra joined us for a livestreamed Q&A moderated by Coolidge Director of Marketing & Development Beth Gilligan. Watch here or at the embedded video below:

Having technical issues? Visit our FAQ page here.

Reviews
Review Text

An uncannily assured look at teenage anxieties. Throughout, Joyce Chopra patiently and shrewdly observes the contradictions of human behavior that Laura Dern brilliantly conveys.

Review Author
Jake Cole
Review Publication
Slant Magazine
Review Text

Magical! Equal parts teen movie, mother-daughter drama, and psychological horror ... No less miraculous is Smooth Talk’s ability to feel brand new, despite having been filmed more than thirty years ago.

Review Author
Anne Cohen
Review Publication
Refinery29
Review Text

Deserves classic status ... the new 4K restoration getting a run in American virtual cinemas this weekend does a great service by boosting the profile of a major work from an artist who never got her due.

Review Author
Charles Bramesco
Review Publication
Little White Lies

This Week

  • A gingko tree bears witness to the lives of three generations of people, as they are quietly transformed by the mysterious power of nature.

    Showtimes
  • The eagerly awaited sequel to the 2006 phenomenon that defined a generation. 

    Showtimes
  • Award-winning director Sophy Romvari’s lyrical and profound feature debut.

    Showtimes
  • Welcome to a new world of style.

    Showtimes
  • The new film from Kristoffer Borgli (Dream Scenario), starring Zendaya and Robert Pattinson.

    Showtimes
  • An adventure 65 million years in the making.

    Showtimes
  • Join professor Andre Puca of Emerson College as he explores the style and themes of Anderson’s films spanning all 3 decades of his noteworthy career

    Showtimes
  • Featuring a live, original score by the Anvil Orchestra!


     

    Showtimes
  • Olivier Assayas’s live-wire international breakthrough stars a magnetic Maggie Cheung as a version of herself.

    Showtimes
  • Richard Linklater's funny, affectionate, and clear-eyed look at high school life with a precise feel for the '70s and a killer soundtrack.

    Showtimes
  • With Elegance Bratton and producer Chester Algernal Gordon in person, moderated by Joseph V. Porter.

    Showtimes
  • A strange doorway appears in the basement of a furniture showroom.

    Showtimes
  • He does wild and crazy things because he has nothing to lose... but his life.

    Showtimes
  • Director Joscha Bongard joins us in-person for a post-film discussion, co-presented by the Goethe Institut Boston. 

    Showtimes
  • nouvelle vague and contempt

    Join us for two cinematic meditations on desire, ambition, and the art of making movies.

    Showtimes
  • Learn more about the movie, its director, and its influence on movies and filmmakers.

    Showtimes
  • A worldwide smash hit, Rififi earned director Jules Dassin the Best Director prize at Cannes and set the standard for screen robberies for decades to come.

    Showtimes
  • A film by Lynne Ramsay, acclaimed director of Ratcatcher

    Showtimes