Smile Review
By Jake Euker
Smile charts the progress of a round of finals for the fictitious Young American Miss pageant being held in Santa Rosa, California. The civic force behind this event is a community-minded car salesman named Big Bob Freelander (Bruce Dern), a yokel with good intentions, an abiding optimism, and an inexhaustible reserve of clichéd bromides about the importance of a positive attitude. Brenda DiCarlo (Barbara Feldon) acts as pageant coordinator and den mother to the young contestants; her husband Andy's suicidal tendencies are exacerbated, rather than quelled, by all the forced goodwill she radiates and by the pageant's general, bright, can-do American vibe. Big Bob, especially, finds this mystifying - what on Earth is there to be blue about in a land of such copious opportunity and beautiful young women such as ours? - and the best advice he can muster for his desperate friend is to "go out there and have some fun."
Smile's best sequences, though, are those involving the Young American Misses themselves. In these roles, a wealth of young talent appears: Annette O'Toole, Colleen Camp, Joan Prather, Maria O'Brien, and even a young Melanie Griffith. One contestant desperately instructs the audience on how to pack a suitcase for the talent portion of the competition. Another plays up her Mexican-American heritage with such patriotic gusto that you long to drive a stake through her heart. Director Michael Ritchie and screenwriter Jerry Belson play these young women for gags, but the humor has no cruelty to it; we laugh at the contestants' shapeless dancing, their wobbling comportment and doe-eyed pliability, but there's no question that they have our sympathy.
Smile was a product of a cynical era in American life, following as it did on the heels of Watergate and the Vietnam War, and its mockery of the sunny, unexamined optimism of its principals is thus that much more surprising in its good-naturedness. A peripheral joy of the film is the extent to which it functions as a document of the decade in which the happy face, avocado green and harvest gold, leisure suits, and the music of Bread rose to cultural prominence. Smile, from its groovy opening credits on, is like a season of I Love the '70s condensed into two hours, and in its intimation that this is a uniquely disposable culture it's decades ahead of VH-1.

Facts and Figures
Year: 1975
Run time: 113 mins
In Theaters: Wednesday 9th July 1975
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 3.5 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 100%
Fresh: 13
IMDB: 7.3 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Michael Ritchie
Producer: Michael Ritchie
Screenwriter: Jerry Belson
Also starring: Bruce Dern, Barbara Feldon, Michael Kidd, Geoffrey Lewis, Nicholas Pryor, Joan Prather, Denise Nickerson, Melanie Griffith, Annette O'Toole, Michael Ritchie, Jerry Belson