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Hancock
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Directed by Peter Berg
A hard-drinking superhero with a notorious reputation as a womanizer enters into an unlikely affair with a small-town housewife in director Peter Berg's unconventional look at the private life of a superhuman crime-fighter. Will Smith stars as the embittered do-gooder whose lifestyle is more akin to a rock star than a role model, and who has grown as disillusioned with his once-admiring public as they have of him. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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WindbreakerWindbreaker HANCOCK
by Windbreaker in Windbreaker!
lost interest.
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"Who just wasted 90 minutes of his life watching Hancock? This guy. I should have listened to the wife and just stuck with enjoying the trailer (which included all the best comedic moments). I will give Peter Berg credit for not dragging this into a 2 hour movie. But in 90 minutes, choose your poison: comedy, arch-nemesis, reformation, origin.... you could drill down on any one of these. Han " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog 5 Reasons a Watchmen Movie Was ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Many smart cinephiles and comic book geeks will avoid watching [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Spout’s Last Minute DVD Shoppin ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Because there’s nothing like waiting until the last minute to do some holiday shopping, we’ve compiled this handy-dandy shopping guide to the best DVDs of 2008 that you can use now, or wait " [More]
docpotatodocpotato Hancock
by docpotato in One Movie a Week
liked it.
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"Hancock is a surprising film. For one thing, I was surprised that Jason Bateman, usually a master of smarm and weaselly tics, was able to portray a kind-hearted, genuine good guy with such conviction. Here, he uses his formidable skill at comedic deadpan to deepen Ray, a sweet, gentle boy scout of a Public Relations man. The strength of the film’s action scenes was also quite disarming. Though director Peter Berg’s fidgety, shaky camera often confused the action or diluted the drama, " [More]
lawrencemendilawrencemendi hancock
by lawrencemendi in lawrencemendi Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"would not play " [More]
dickbuistdickbuist Re:The Worst of 2008
by dickbuist in Worst Movie Ever
"Where do you find the time to waste on so many bad films? I'm not sure which category to assign to these, but they all are contenders for Worst Picture: Bangkok Dangerous Bedtime Stories Y " [More]
cspraguecsprague Re:The Worst of 2008
by csprague in Worst Movie Ever
"I'm not sure which category to assign to these, but they all are contenders for Worst Picture: Bangkok Dangerous Bedtime Stories Yes Man [More]
seelyseely Re:Holiday movies: Cartoon mice ...
by seely in Coming Soon
"Whoa, where did this come from? Was this kept hush-hush after the flaming peice of sub-mediocrity we know as Hancock? Usually Will Smith releases are a pretty big deal with lots of promotion and hoopla, but the first I ever heard of Seven Pounds was this week--granted I haven't been to a recent theatrical release " [More]
SkyPilotSkyPilot Thanksgiving movies: the good a ...
by SkyPilot in Coming Soon
"The new movies I mention are coming out on Thanksgiving, which is Thursday the 26th. Getting Bigger All the Time: The Vince Vaughn Chronicles [More]
lopezdashlopezdash Will Smith says he would love t ...
by lopezdash in Bollywood
"Will Smith wants to star in a Bollywood film. The 'Hancock' actor - who has made his name by landing lead roles in a series of big blockbuster action movies - thinks it is time to try his hand at a different genre. He said: "I've made a couple of speculative deals in India. We've got some Bolly-Will movies going on!" Will also dismissed claims he is planning to make a follow-up to his " [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Hancock sports a premise that must have seemed loaded with potential on paper. Will Smith as not simply a superhero, but a drunken superhero? The inebriated anti-Superman? What could be more explosively funny, after all, than a fog-brained, intoxicated caped crusader, klutzily lunging around in the skies, crashing headfirst into billboards on the Los Angeles freeway and causing all kinds of wanton destruction? It isn't difficult to see why Columbia greenlit this one. But this big-budget special-effects-saturated comic fantasy is far from a classic, and the sequences in it that deliver a genuine impact exist so far outside the sphere of comedy that perhaps the producers should have done away with the farcical element altogether. To be more specific, the above one-sentence premise is actually misleading: Hancock incorporates not one but two films - it begins as a farce about a superhero lush, then doesn't quite know where to go with that, swaps genres and derails into a far more interesting movie. Smith, of course, is John Hancock, an Angelino endowed with the abilities of supersonic and interstellar flight, unlimited strength, and an immunity to all forms of injury. He's also a crass, foul-mouthed, lazy, booze-soaked nightmare with little regard for anyone other than himself - his heroic exploits leave a trail of careless and excessive destruction, such as an incident where he hijacks a carload of terrorists, lifts the car thousands of feet off the ground, and then impales it (terrorists and all) on the needle of a skyscraper. All of this brouhaha, of course, royally tees off both taxpayers and Los Angeles city officials, who have long since grown so jaded with Hancock's outrageous exploits that they want him put away for a long, long time. There are a few (read: very few) moments of comic glory in these early stages, and one would be hard-pressed not to be chuckle at the sight of Hancock in mid-flight with a massive bottle of Jack Daniels in one hand (an inspired and outrageously funny image), or the sight of Hancock enjoying "spaghetti madness" with a suburban family and violently cramming mounds of pasta and meatballs into his mouth like the biggest slob that ever walked. (Shades of Montenegro). But 95% of the humor in the first half of the movie feels both lazy and stupid; most of the film's "comic highlights" consist of scenes where Hancock's taunters repeatedly goad him into outrageous acts of violence by calling him an 'asshole' - not exactly unfettered comic inspiration, let alone when it is reiterated multiple times. The film scrapes the bottom of the gutter in one of the opening scenes, when it assigns that language to a four or five-year-old boy. About twenty-five minutes in - when a washed-up PR executive named Ray Embrey (a miscast Jason Bateman) crisscrosses paths with Hancock and carries out an ingenious plan to "improve" his image by cleaning him up - one wonders how in the world the movie can sustain itself, especially after Hancock follows suit so quickly. It does, and then some, by pulling one unforeseen card out of its deck - a massive plot twist not given away in any of the movie's trailers or write-ups. I won't spoil the movie by disclosing it here, but will only state that the comedy basically disappears from the film about 50 minutes in, and that - if it becomes a far more conventional superhero movie in terms of doing away with Hancock's slobbery - it also unveils a surprisingly complex and thoughtful backstory for Hancock, one with epic undercurrents, as well as strands of heartbreaking pathos, romance, enhanced psychological complexity (including a subconscious reason for his boozing) and historical implication. The degree to which director Peter Berg (The Kingdom) handles these sincere and earnest moments adroitly strikes one as so convincing and so astonishing after the ineptitude of the first half hour that, again, one cannot shake the feeling that he should just lose the comedy altogether - that he's working in the wrong genre here. Unfortunately, the picture sets up such interesting implications in terms of what it does with John Hancock's backstory that the ending feels like a cop-out, both unresolved and half-assed; in terms of where it leaves the other characters, it raises far more questions than it can even begin to answer, and Berg and his scriptwriters fail to even try. The performances feel uneven; Smith is engaging as usual, but Bateman delivers an absolutely atrocious portrayal that surely must have left the director and producers gagging helplessly. He interprets Ray Embrey as a kind of whiny and ineffectual weakling, a loser wimp whose ability to attract his dynamic spouse, Mary (Charlize Theron) is as much of a mystery as his ability, from what we see of his one PR campaign, to sustain a home in the valley and support a wife and child. Theron, however, virtually walks away with the movie; interpreting Mary as a fierce, angry and impassioned woman, she brings far more depth, resonance and dimension to the character than the material even begins to deserve, and again (as in Monster) proves why she is one of Hollywood's most disciplined and underutilized actresses. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
 

Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
lost interest.
most people
Most people
are neutral about it.

Other opinions

laraemeadows
laraemeadows
loved it.
KJ-27
KJ-27
loved it.
Jbecher
Jbecher
loved it.
rvanbibber
rvanbibber
is not interested.
Puhnner
Puhnner
is not interested.
quietmachine
quietmachine
is not interested.