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Movie Mix

Will Smith's 'Hancock' Fiasco

By Eileen Jones, AlterNet. Posted July 5, 2008.


"Hancock" is supposed to be a wry commentary on the pressure of being Will Smith, but the message gets lost in a big-budget Hollywood train wreck.
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"Hancock" starts off with an inspired idea: Will Smith as an angry street person alienated by his own superpowers. Smith's Hancock is overlaid with two potentially volatile elements that accompany Smith everywhere: his race and his superstar status. In the typical Will Smith movie, those elements are neutralized and made to play nice together. That's why everybody not only loves Will Smith, but loves to boast about how much they love him; because of his unique ability to negotiate black stardom with such aplomb, distributors have long claimed he "transcends race" (meaning his films sell anywhere, even in regions and nations where racial prejudice typically limits the box-office appeal of certain stars). You can see the logic behind Barack Obama's joke that he'd like to see Will Smith play him in a movie. In turn, Will Smith joked on a recent episode of "The Colbert Report" that Obama might ruin his own plan to become the first African American president. Each recognizes in the other his fellow "transcender." Both are engaged in a public high-wire act that's exhausting to watch, in part because it must appear to be as effortless and uncalculated as possible.

In succeeding so spectacularly so far, both men risk accusations of "transcending race" by selling out, flashing megawatt smiles while skating over the bitterness of the African American experience, refusing to display anger, appealing to white audiences with endless reassurance: See how smoothly we've succeeded, how apparently unscarred we are by experience, what solid citizens we are with our nicely tailored suits, our picture-perfect families, our upbeat attitudes. Madison Avenue couldn't have come up with better advertisements for racial progress in America than Obama and Smith.

Which somehow makes it a downright relief to see Will Smith slouching around in a greasy watch cap, drinking cheap bourbon out of the bottle and swearing at anyone who looks at him. It's clear that the marketing drones who designed the film's preview actually understood the appeal of the project, making it all about Smith- -- Smith slouching, Smith snarling, Smith drunk, Smith looking dirty and smelly and low-down, Smith seeming to care nothing about his own appeal, his own powers or his own popularity. Seeing him play the opposite of the slick "Mr. July" blockbuster persona is an example of the conspiratorial joy we feel watching any big star subvert his or her own image, knowing that our star will be restored to us before long. We know Will Smith will emerge clean, handsome and can-do, just like we know the supposedly plain, awkward, badly dressed girl will get a makeover and turn into Anne Hathaway. We like watching this star-emerging process over and over.

But in "Hancock," Smith's roll in the gutter followed by his transformation back into his usual shiny star-self has an even bigger kick to it: It's a spasm of guilty pleasure when the African American Superman allows the audience, for a moment, to share the inhuman, exhausting strain of trying to be "twice as perfect."

The trouble with "Hancock" is that its wry, reflexive commentary on the pressure of being Will Smith gets lost in the more typical reflexivity of the big-budget Hollywood fiasco: It turns into a movie about how hard it is to make a decent movie, no matter how good the starting concept is. Somewhere along the line, this train crashed -- which is why it's so dismally appropriate that "Hancock" leads off with an early staging of an actual train wreck. The film wreck is so awful, and so slow to develop, that as you watch you have plenty of time to guess what, or who, went wrong here. Which one of the credited screenwriters -- Vy Vincent Ngo or Vince Gilligan -- is more responsible for the moronic script elements that finally and completely ruin an excellent premise about an antisocial drunken bum who's also a highly damage-prone superhero? Which superstar with an amazing track record of hit movies really should have given up his embarrassing producer credit on this fiasco? We all know the answer to that one: Will Smith -- though it may be that all he wanted was the chance to do this hugely satisfying star turn as the world's angriest, most powerful and least "presentable" black man.


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alternatively
Posted by: talkville on Jul 5, 2008 1:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On another metaphorical-symbolic level, perhaps this individual could be interpreted as "Uncle Sam", alienated yet curiously enthralled, with his own 'superpowers' (weaponry, CIA, FBI, Military Services) -- and the current "Uncle Sam" may be abysmally incoherent, disoriented and altogether not really too sober or rational to realize the actual meaning and responsibilities entailed... .

A fiasco in both cases of Will Smith or "Uncle Sam"; but perhaps a fiasco worth going to see?

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» RE: alternatively Posted by: elpa
» RE: alternatively Posted by: talkville
mugged
Posted by: particle on Jul 5, 2008 9:47 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I haven't seen the movie and won't if the trailers are any indication of it.

Smith is likable, and I enjoy seeing movies push the technologic boundaries. But at some point you've got to know when the gee-whiz stuff gets so far over the top that it's just mugging for the camera on steroids. I'm actually a little nauseated by the ads.

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» RE: mugged Posted by: ArtemInox
» RE: mugged Posted by: particle
» RE: mugged Posted by: Kpod
The movie is still worth seeing
Posted by: BobS on Jul 7, 2008 12:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree that the stylized violence and over-the-top-special effects overwhelmed the more complex and even emotionally moving parts of the story.

Still, I found myself caring about the main characters and was surprised to see how Will Smith could emote so much emotional pain. I'm so used to seeing him in roles where irony and self-mockery are his main form of communication.

I also enjoyed the anti-corporate message that the filmmakers slipped in when the Jason Bateman character tries to sell some hi-powered CEO types on the value of giving away some of their products and services to the impoverished.

I'd even go to Hancock II if his character smacked around some of the warmongers and corporate thugs who do far more damage than the two bit crooks he takes on in Hancock.

Somehow, I don't think that is a movie I will ever see.

Bob Simpson
The BobboSphere

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Bogus article
Posted by: kenhymes on Jul 7, 2008 3:52 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The movie has been in the works for over a decade, and was developed independently of Will Smith, based on a comic. The writer adolescently conflates character with actor in a way that demeans the source material and creates a weak, pseudo-allegorical frame for the movie which does not exist. If it's about anything deep, it's about the inability of raw power to control events.

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» RE: Bogus article Posted by: Lagstorm
» RE: Bogus article Posted by: Lagstorm
» Bogus Comment Posted by: Kpod
Reviewers always put their own spin on things
Posted by: jnelson4765 on Jul 7, 2008 3:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I didn't see those racial overtones you're talking about - I thought it was a quite good movie. Not what I was expecting from the trailers at all. It's not the deepest script, but it takes the superhero story on a spin none of my comic book geek friends can remember ever seeing done before.

And you could have cast Owen Wilson in the role of John Hancock and it would have been just as believable.

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» but... Posted by: raymondg
its a GD movie for cripes sakes...
Posted by: Bearzerker on Jul 7, 2008 4:09 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
did you enjoy it?... because thats what entertainment is suppose to do!

stop trying to tell us what to think about it and tell us if its worth seeing or not.
enough already.

jeeezzzz

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» Thanks Bearserker Posted by: donl51
Hand-job: Is he just another Stupid Hero?
Posted by: williameon on Jul 7, 2008 4:12 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With his hand on his Cock and one eye on the Ball
Look he can Dribble!
Will Smith/Joe Blow is going to fly down from Heaven And
Save us someday!
Blah! Blah! Blah!

The FAUX MEDIA is the message.
The Aliens have landed and
They’re in Office.

Dear Will,
I’ve got one for ya!
How about M.L.K. as President and you as his
Shoe-shine Boy?

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» And you're just another Posted by: donl51
Out of the Blue
Posted by: When In Doubt on Jul 7, 2008 4:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Aha! Now I get it!
The economy sucks, gas is $4.209 at the pump,the country is worried about heating the house this winter...and what happens?

Hollywood draws in over a hundred million dollars...and might I add ?....counting?

Stunning!

! Maybe I DON"T get !

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» RE: Out of the Blue Posted by: luzmejor
» RE: Out of the theatres Posted by: donl51
I hear Mork from Ork is also in some movies
Posted by: DeaconJ on Jul 7, 2008 4:30 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So the Fresh Prince of Bellair demands I pay him homage to his super abilities. Along with his resurfaced cohort Derek from Silver Spoons. $19 for two to the cineplex, nah , not even added to the Netflix Queue. Did he snap the backbone of that CGI whale in the trailer. I don't even care. What only concerns me is the huge turnout at the box office for something so mindless. Kind of reinforces that BBC article talking about a divide in the evolutionary tract of humanity.

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Hancock/Iraq
Posted by: ray burchard on Jul 7, 2008 4:37 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This movie may well represent a video commentary of just what can happen when to much stock is given to notoriety. Then when an individual like, Will Smith and/or GWBush, is given a greater controlling voice in the scripting of events with little importance given to qualifications. Alas thereby an extension of the individuals ego resulting in a documented fiasco, ‘Hancock’ / ‘Iraq’ where one portrays death and destruction and the other exacts it.

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....
Posted by: cemdev on Jul 7, 2008 5:58 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
my god, just go back to english lit class and writing book reports. i know, i know, you're ever so clever for trying to wittingly review a movie. bravo.

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» RE: .... Posted by: jroth420
» RE: .... Posted by: 24&somuchmore
Hancock is about black negative stereotypes
Posted by: nfamous on Jul 7, 2008 6:04 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you cannot see that Hancock is about negative black stereotypes then you are either deaf, dumb or blind. First of all a superhero is supposed to be a modicum of prestige and morality. Why do we need a black man to play the role of the bad superhero? Why is he a drunk (as if alcohol would really affect a superhero)? Why is he chasing a white woman, Charlize Theron, around when in fact it's white women that normally pursue black men? Why does Hancock need a white man to repair his image? This is white man's burden all over again. This is white man being in control of black men and protecting his women from black oversexedness.

In this case it even goes a step further. Theron uses her powers to reject Smith violently. She doesn't want anyone upsetting her perfect little life even though she really wants to be with him. Theron loves Hancock but chooses to be with her husband and son who she will outlive by hundreds and maybe thousands of years. The reason given for this is that when they are too close together they become human. That sounds like a pretty good deal to me. I wouldn't want to live forever........at least not in this world and especially if I'm black.

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Is that what "Hancock" is supposed to be about?
Posted by: ligaya2 on Jul 7, 2008 6:21 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A "wry, reflexive commentary on the pressure of being Will Smith?" I didn't get that from the trailers or generally bad reviews (admittedly, I only scanned a few, with some liking Will Smith's "pushing the envelope" of superhero-dom). Hadn't planned on seeing it in the theaters because of a limited budget, but now I might as a vote of confidence in Will Smith in reaction to this review.

I thought Hancock was about audiences wanting a popcorn movie for a couple of hours' relief from reality & their usual diet of documentaries, dramas, & indies. I thought Hancock was about the studios making millions of dollars. I didn't know it was supposed to be deep.

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entertainment
Posted by: darkmark on Jul 7, 2008 6:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that's it. this movie is for entertaining the audiance and making money, for will smith and his fellow actors, the rest of the cast and producers. we know it when we go to see these movies. i sat in my chair last night and said "god my life is boring." what can i do right now to make it at least feel better?" watch a movie, go to a show. guess what's out there? not much, really not much. i enjoyed the movie. it is entertaining. that's what i went for. i took my 16 year old son and we both enjoyed the movie.

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» RE: entertainment Posted by: Kpod
You're kidding, right?
Posted by: amrahne on Jul 7, 2008 8:23 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I saw this movie over the weekend. It was not exactly what I expected, but that is part of the reason I enjoyed it. I felt the past of the main characters could have been explored a little more, but I thought it was a good, entertaining movie. Acceptably well-acted and not too smarmy.

At no time did I think to myself, "Huh, this must be about Will Smith!" That seems so college writing 101. Can we not just enjoy the movie instead of always making everything about something else? Race, money, power - no, it's just entertainment.

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Are We Clear?
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jul 7, 2008 8:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Smith has had his (extra-long) 15 minutes. Now that he has gone Holly-Weird and is on his way to becoming an Operating Thetan, maybe someone else gets a chance- like someone who can play something other than a one-dimensional caricature.
Now he can kick back at the Celebrity Center with Tom and John and lament the passing by of time...

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» RE: Are We Clear? Posted by: realist
» RE: Are We Clear? Posted by: Holla
What does it take and when will We Learn?
Posted by: louisofva on Jul 7, 2008 9:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OH My GOD! When will we as americans come to accept that even the drunk lying in the gutter is of some worth. Just because you sit a desk, have three meals a day, sleep in your own bed, have the matieral comforts of this life, does not make you a better person than the "bum on the street!" Nor does you money make you superior to the "bag lady" picking up cans! Most of us as so self absorbed that we think we are the Sun and all others at moons, not even planets, capable of life.
If the truth displayed before your eyes in this movie doesn't motivate you to assess the plight of your fellowman and see the potential of every human being in this world, then I pity you. For your ignorance is deplorable. America...the melting pot! What a farce! I love the fact that we are different. We condemn people because they are not like "us!" Revel in the the differences! Each of us share the same potential to be better than our circumstances...Please America, try to live up to that potential, for once!

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Not everything is a conspiracy...
Posted by: Opinmynd on Jul 7, 2008 1:03 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Look... I am one of the most pro-black, down with the struggle brotha's ever. This movie has nothing to do with stereotypes or Will Smith's subconscious cries for people to understand his lot (or Obama's lot) in life.

This movie was good. Not the best in the world, but good. I suggest everyone go see it.

I can't stand it when people won't let a work of fiction be just that. Yes, fiction has it's parallels with reality, but this movie is not trying to make a commentary on Will Smith's or Obama's life. Was "I Am Legend" a commentary on how Will Smith feels isolated? Was "Men in Black" a commentary on black stereotypes? I don't think so. Try another angle please.

I've seen Hnacock twice, and it's good. It is a movie about relationships, responsibility, and a deeper purpose. It depicts how we must all over come our own demons to succeed.

If the lead role were a white person, would you say the same thing? I think the only thing bringing a racial aspect to this movie is the above critique.

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I like the premise, haven't seen it yet.
Posted by: nightgaunt on Jul 7, 2008 1:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The idea of an otherwise normal person given powers beyond those of mortal humans and then doing poorly with it is good. Any man or woman could have played the character since it is essentially about human behavior and it could have been about getting millions of dollars and what it could do to a person. Not everyone can handle it. No racial subtext is necessary but may not have been able to transcend at this time. Will Smith is obviously comfortable enough to play someone who has problems and handles it poorly. Where his super powers cause problems instead of ending them.

Another good meditation on super powers and what they can do to a human society is the superlative Pixar film, "THE INCREDIBLES" (2004) and what can happen that isn't all sweetness and light.

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I wonder if
Posted by: ArtemInox on Jul 7, 2008 3:01 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this pretentious windbag of an author will ever learn to write, and on topics that get the sustained attention of anyone with more depth than a puddle.

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» RE: I wonder if Posted by: Kpod
Is there one fact to back up your premise?
Posted by: kcheyfitz on Jul 7, 2008 3:36 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like at least one other commenter (Ken Hymes?), this review's premise strikes me as screwy and without any basis in fact. Hancock is an allegory about Will Smith? I hardly think so. The super hero conduct in Hancock never strays far from the classic patterns of super hero mythology established by Marvel and DC Comics, except that Hanock is his own alter ego. (For more on this, watch again Bill's soliloquy on super heroes in the closing minutes of Kill Bill 2. By the way, I can't recall where I saw this reference recently, but it may have been in another review of Hancock.) No, I think this movie is about simpler stuff — the good in us all competing with the asshole in us all. Which is what every Will Smith action movie is about. From the advance marketing for Hancock, I expected to see a drunk with a heart of gold. That's exactly what I got. So I feel this movie has delivered on all it promised. Which is a lot more than I can say for the review.

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Reviewing a movie,
Posted by: donl51 on Jul 7, 2008 5:13 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With so far one or two exceptions, the bulk here making reviews of a movie only one has seen suffers from a ailment known as A.C.I.D. which stands for''Anal Cranal Inversion Disorder'' I''ll let you brainiacks further figure that out!.....Our President suffers from it as well!..Eileen Jones definately suffers from this for writing this rediculous article in the first place!

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» RE: eviewing a movie, Posted by: Opinmynd
» RE: eviewing a movie, Posted by: donl51
» RE: eviewing a movie, Posted by: Kpod
Will Smith and the Law of Attraction
Posted by: dhamza on Jul 7, 2008 7:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Will Smith totally gave a performance that highlights the Law of Attraction. He and Charlize just happen to find each other after all of this time? That was definitely the Law of Attraction at work!
http://hopurl.com/45967

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Attack of the Pea Brains
Posted by: Kpod on Jul 9, 2008 11:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's pretty clear what's going on; you just don't like reading comments by people who are more intelligent than you, especially if they're female.

You guys (and i do mean guys) don't seem to have the concept of a movie review. A movie review is SUPPOSED to have ideas behind it. that's the whole point. If that's too much for your little brains to handle, stick to the Rotten Tomatoes thumbs-up thumbs-down tabloid verdicts.

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Hancock was a very symbolic movie
Posted by: maddrabbit23 on Jul 14, 2008 1:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
he seem to represent the Black man in america as a whole. He lacked a knowledge of self and his history, yet he had amazing power. He was angry that no1 claimed him nor did he know where he came from. He's at his strongest when he's away from the white woman and weakest when he's near her, even though he had a subconscious attraction to her. The white racists were responsible for his lack of knowledge of self yet one of them also tried to help straighten him up. there's more but read between the lines.

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