Hancock Movie Review (1 1/2 Stars)

Movie Reviews by Michael Phillips

The idea sounds ripe: Will Smith, one of the screen's most engaging movie stars, playing a surly wino of a superhero, making a mess of Los Angeles as he comes to the occasional aid of those in need. But not even Smith's charisma can mitigate the chaos that is "Hancock."

It depresses me to think of all the preteens who'll be sitting through this, since it squeaked by with a PG-13 rating; the violence and the general abrasiveness are a genuine drag. Then again, adults won't be much better off. In this highly superheroic summer of "Iron Man" and the forthcoming "The Dark Knight," "Hancock" can offer only an A-list headliner in a D-list project.

The notion is that a vaguely self-loathing superhero, who spends his days flying around Los Angeles and taking care of its assault-weapon-toting vermin, suffers from self-esteem issues that prevent him from being the best he can be.

Enter a public relations whiz ( Jason Bateman), whom Hancock saves from a collision with a train. The PR man, despite the protestations of his wife ( Charlize Theron), takes on Hancock as his latest project. The flack makes Hancock, who doesn't know how he gained his special powers, see the value in soft, non-destructive landings and the odd kind word.

Halfway through, screenwriters Vy Vincent Ngo and Vince Gilligan dump a huge load of superhero back story onto the movie's doorstep. Director Peter Berg and his cinematographer shoot a lot of "Hancock" in gritty, nausea- inducing close-up, and the effectsÑaurally bombastic, visually ordinaryÑsit on the action in all the wrong ways. Why shoot this film like an R-rated action thriller? What good does all the nastiness do except to rough up an audience like a corrupt cop interrogating a suspect?

Not even Smith's charisma can mitigate the chaos that is "Hancock."

The violence and the general abrasiveness are a genuine drag.

Columbia Pictures (Sony)

PG-13 (some intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence, and language). 1:32.

"Hancock" stars Will Smith, Charlize Theron, Jason Bateman, and Eddie Marsan.

 

About "Hancock"

There are heroes ... there are superheroes ... and then there's Hancock (Will Smith). With great power comes great responsibility -- everyone knows that -- everyone, that is, but Hancock.

Disgruntled, conflicted, sarcastic, and misunderstood, Hancock's well-intentioned heroics might get the job done and save countless lives, but always seem to leave jaw-dropping damage in their wake. The public has finally had enough -- as grateful as they are to have their local hero, the good citizens of Los Angeles are wondering what they did to deserve this guy. Hancock isn't a man who cares what people think -- until the day that he saves the life of PR executive Ray Embrey (Jason Bateman), and the unpopular superhero begins to realize that he may have a vulnerable side after all.

 

 

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