John
Q Movie Review:
How
far would you go to save a loved one? This is the question
that for many of us thankfully will remain a hypothetical
pondering. However for John Archibald (Denzel Washington),
in the new Drama John Q the question drives
him to stage a high stakes crisis where life and death are
the only options.
Directed by Nick Cassavetes, John Q tells the
story of John Archibald and his family, wife Denise (Kimberly
Elise), and son Mike (Daniel E. Smith) as they struggle
to cope in difficult economic times. John is working part
time at his factory due to hours being cut, and his wife
has just started at a grocery store. Despite the financial
hardships, they are a loving and happy family who have good
friends and are respected by their congregation and community.
Tragedy strikes the family unexpectedly when Mike collapses
during a baseball game, and is discovered to have a failing
heart by the doctors attending him. It is revealed that
short of a transplant, Mike will not live much longer. The
cost of the transplant is a quarter of a million dollars,
and John is informed that his insurance will not cover the
procedure. Unwilling to let his only child die, John and
Denise set about contacting various relief and assistance
agencies in an effort to raise the money and save their
son.
Desperate to pay the rising costs, the Archibalds soon take
to selling their possessions and accepting charity from
their congregation but it is still far too little as they
are denied assistance time after time by the bureaucracy.
Desperate to keep his son in the hospital after being informed
of his pending release due to lack of funds, John takes
matters into his own hands and takes the hospitals
emergency room and several people hostage. John has a very
simple request, all he wants is to have his sons name placed
on the donor list so that Mike might have a chance to live.
During the hostage standoff, John has to negotiate with
veteran police officer Grimes (Robert Duvall) who wants
to end the standoff quickly and quietly. The efforts are
hampered by the Chief of Police (Ray Liotta), who is more
concerned about election year politics and his media image
than in doing what is right for all parties involved. Further
complicating the situation are Rebecca Payne (Anne Heche),
as a hospital administrator more concerned with the bottom
line than helping the public and Dr. Turner (James Woods),
as the surgeon that can save Mike, but who is more concerned
with policy and procedure than the human issue at hand.
The hostages John holds are a mixed group including a Hispanic
mother, an expecting couple, an abusive rich snob and his
girlfriend, nurses and guards and a smooth operator know
as Lester (Eddie Griffin). It is the diversity of the group
that leads to some of the more memorable moments in the
film as the notion of health care in America is seen differently
by each member of the group, and the film avoids the racial
issue and instead relies more on the economic factors that
for many determine the type and quality medical care they
can receive. While the film is dramatic, it rarely seems
forced or contrived and the issues raised by the film are
valid with no easy answers. The film also takes steps to
show the other side of the issue, as while the bureaucracy
is painted in a bad light, the audience is given some of
the reasons behind their actions and decisions.
The cast is very good and Washington and Woods give outstanding
performances without stepping on each others toes.
The ensemble cast works well and there is solid chemistry
amongst all the characters. Perhaps the most enjoyable things
about John Q other than the fact that it entertained,
was that it informed without preaching nor making broad
generalizations. The situation in the film was shown as
what happened to one family without making broad references
about this sort of situation happening to everyone. John
Q is a well-made and informative film that was a pleasant
surprise.
4
out of 5
Gareth Von Kallenbach
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