Thank You for Smoking (4/5) Movie CLIP - Doing It for the Mortgage (2005) HD

143,308
0
Published 2015-09-28
Thank You for Smoking movie clips: j.mp/1WPe5xz
BUY THE MOVIE:
FandangoNOW - www.fandangonow.com/details/movie/thank-you-for-sm…
iTunes - apple.co/1H5Rpm6
Google Play - bit.ly/1ImH8n3
Amazon - amzn.to/1H5Ry9a
Fox Movies - bit.ly/1dQnDGX
Don't miss the HOTTEST NEW TRAILERS: bit.ly/1u2y6pr

CLIP DESCRIPTION:
Heather's (Katie Holmes) article revealing all of Nick's (Aaron Eckhart) dirty little secrets is front page news.

FILM DESCRIPTION:
The directorial debut from Jason Reitman, the media satire Thank You for Smoking stars Aaron Eckhart as Nick, a man who has turned spinning news and information into a successful career for the tobacco lobby. He plots strategies with his colleagues (Maria Bello and David Koechner) on how to make other dangerous products more appealing to the American public. Nick ends up going to Hollywood with his young son (Cameron Bright) in order to get a movie producer to include characters smoking in his newest film. Nick is kidnapped by a vigilante group concerned about the harmful nature of his product. The cast includes William H. Macy as a Senator who runs on a strong anti-tobacco position, Rob Lowe as the Hollywood bigwig, and Robert Duvall as the king of the tobacco industry. The film is an adaptation of the novel of the same name by Christopher Buckley.

CREDITS:
TM & © Fox (2005)
Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
Cast: Cameron Bright, Aaron Eckhart, Sam Elliott, David Koechner, Rob Lowe, Daniel Travis, Maria Bello, Kim Dickens, Katie Holmes
Director: Jason Reitman
Producers: Stephen Belafonte, Michael Beugg, Eveleen Bandy, David J. Bloomfield, Daniel Brunt, Alessandro Camon, Daniel Dubiecki, Max Levchin, Mindy Marin, Michael R. Newman, David O. Sacks, Mark Woolway, Edward R. Pressman, John Schmidt, Elon Musk
Screenwriters: Christopher Buckley, Jason Reitman

WHO ARE WE?
The MOVIECLIPS channel is the largest collection of licensed movie clips on the web. Here you will find unforgettable moments, scenes and lines from all your favorite films. Made by movie fans, for movie fans.

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR MOVIE CHANNELS:
MOVIECLIPS: bit.ly/1u2yaWd
ComingSoon: bit.ly/1DVpgtR
Indie & Film Festivals: bit.ly/1wbkfYg
Hero Central: bit.ly/1AMUZwv
Extras: bit.ly/1u431fr
Classic Trailers: bit.ly/1u43jDe
Pop-Up Trailers: bit.ly/1z7EtZR
Movie News: bit.ly/1C3Ncd2
Movie Games: bit.ly/1ygDV13
Fandango: bit.ly/1Bl79ye
Fandango FrontRunners: bit.ly/1CggQfC

HIT US UP:
Facebook: on.fb.me/1y8M8ax
Twitter: bit.ly/1ghOWmt
Pinterest: bit.ly/14wL9De
Tumblr: bit.ly/1vUwhH7

All Comments (20)
  • If Katie Holmes had reprised her role as Rachel Dawes in The Dark Knight this is what Rachel (Katie Holmes) and Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart) would look like.
  • @YungM.D.
    Confirmed that Harvey Dent got it in
  • @Tinandel
    And they who take up the sword, shall perish by the sword...
  • Christopher Nolan cast Aaron Eckhart as Harvey Dent in The Dark Knight (2008) after seeing Eckhart's performance in this movie.
  • @SpeedyUsher
    She played Nick and in the end, the joke was on her.
  • @tengille
    this movie did a good job coining the phrase "Yuppie Nuremberg Defense"
  • @yashagar4443
    That was savage what goes around comes around bastard.
  • Great movie! And, over the years, I've worked alongside people who gripe that they hate their jobs but admit that they have to pay the mortgage somehow.
  • Two Face & Rachel Dawes Look like that's how Two Face met Rachel Dawes & that's how they've being dating
  • @psych2234
    I bet you're glad Joker blow up Rachel now Harvey
  • Well this is technically Nick’s fault here with being clear to her what’s confidential
  • @mirjamheijn5214
    just imagine what this scene could have been with a good actress.
  • @leonardoc6504
    Depending on your IQ, you will have interpreted the following about the message of this movie: - This is a manipulative man who wants to sell poison at all costs to people. - It is about the conflict between corporations and people. - It is about individual freedoms and personal responsibilities.
  • @fisterhr
    What if I told everyone that 80% of American men smoked in the early 20th century...yet lung cancer was nowhere near as common as it is now? Relax, I'm not a tobacco lobbyist, I do honest work for honest pay...but at the same time, I am a realist. What I'm saying is that there are many factors that cause many of the most common cancers, and other prevalent diseases, of our times. Take the new scientific studies on metabolic disease caused by consuming cheap foods of which most are made up of cheap and simple processed carbohydrates. And yes, I get it, back then cigarettes didn't have all the chemical the cigarettes have now but allow me to make my point with more examples. Let's look at Mexico, in particular southern Mexico. There are many male farmers and male peasants that are well into their 80s or even 90s that smoked and drank tequila for a good portion of their lives. Look at the French in Europe? They consume a lot of fat and smoke a lot, yet they don't get as sick as Americans do and are not nearly as obese. It may have something to do with all that fat they consume and the red wine and the exercise in walking across their cities. Yes, I said FAT. The decades long "boogeyman" that now scientists are accepting wasn't as bad as everyone thought, including saturated fat. Should you start smoking or encourage your children to smoke? NO! That is not what I'm saying. All I'm saying is that we have to stop blaming one thing and forgetting about all the factors that bring us health problems that destroy our quality of life. Think about this. Fat was stigmatized by the mainstream back in the late 70s and early 80s, the beginning of the low-fat craze in America that I'm sure spread around the planet. What happened in the last 40 years of cutting down on fat and consuming more food substituted with more sugar and carbs? Use common sense and look around. If you are old enough, use your mental time machine and go back to the 70s, 80s, and 90s. Did you hear so much about Alzheimer's or Dementia like you do now? Do you remember when Type 2 Diabetes was called Adult Onset Diabetes but changed because now children get it too. Did you see so many dialysis centers around your city or town like you see now? Did you? And btw, tobacco usage went down significantly during this time period. So you tell me, what really happened?