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John Q.
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Directed by Nick Cassavetes.
A national health care crisis in the United States yields this tense drama from screenwriter James Kearns and director Nick Cassavetes, who experienced a real-life dilemma with his daughter's congenital heart disease that mirrors the one in this film. Denzel Washington stars as John Q. Archibald, a factory worker facing financial hardship as a result of reduced hours in his workplace. When his young son, Michael (Daniel E. Smith), is stricken during a baseball game, John and his wife, Denise (Kimberly Elise), discover that their child is in need of an emergency heart transplant. Although the Archibalds have health insurance, they are informed by hospital administrator Rebecca Payne (Anne Heche) that their policy doesn't cover such an expensive procedure. Unable to raise the money himself, John persuades the hospital's compassionate cardiac surgeon, Dr. Raymond Turner (James Woods), to waive his lofty fee, but is still left with too much of a financial burden to bear. With no recourse but to take his son home to die, John snaps and holds the staff and patients of the hospital's emergency room hostage at gunpoint. John is soon a media hero, the focus of intense news coverage, even as police chief Gus Monroe (Ray Liotta) and hostage negotiator Frank Grimes (Robert Duvall) try to resolve the situation before it leads to bloodshed. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide
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JimBellJimBell John Q
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
is neutral about it.
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"John Q (2002) is a dramatic thriller with a message. When John Q’s young son collapses with a heart condition and needs a heart transplant, the HMO will not pay for the expensive procedure, so John Q takes things into his own hands. As with many recent films critical of the United States of America (in this case, its health care), many viewers disliked the movie because it was critical of their country, and many other viewers disliked it because it was blatantly critical of their country. In our postmodernist era, the tendency is to deal with such criticism by saying, “They’re entitled to their opinion.” However, I’d rather respond by asking, “Is the criticism in the movie not justified, and are the blatant criticisms not complaints about obvious wrongs?” I’m not saying I know the answers regarding the national health care issue, but I’d like to see criticism of the film’s position backed up with some evidence. What makes ... " [More]
 

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