A film so caught up in beating us over the head with its message that it fails to be logical, believable or even very entertaining.
John Q (2002)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:127
Fresh:28
Rotten:99
Average Rating:4.4/10
Consensus: Washington's performance rises above the material, but John Q pounds the audience over the head with its message.
Runtime: 1 hr 52 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: John Q. Archibald (Denzel Washington) is struggling through a recession trying to provide for his son Mikey (Daniel E. Smith) and his waitress wife (Kimberly Elise). Mikey collapses at a Little... John Q. Archibald (Denzel Washington) is struggling through a recession trying to provide for his son Mikey (Daniel E. Smith) and his waitress wife (Kimberly Elise). Mikey collapses at a Little League game and is rushed to a hospital. The situation is bleak. Only a heart transplant will save Mikey's life. John's HMO refuses to cover the expensive surgery. With the hospital and his insurance provider unwilling to help and his wife pleading with John to act, he takes matters into his own hands, holding the hospital's renowned heart surgeon (James Woods) and several others hostage in an emergency care wing until the surgery will be performed. Nick Cassavetes directed this attack on the American health care system. Like his previous feature, SHE'S SO LOVELY, Cassavetes proves adept at mining the political ramifications out of human drama. The film criticizes hospitals and health care providers for working in collusion against the working class. This moving drama is propelled by the intense lead performance by Washington as one man against an unjust system. [More]
Starring: Denzel Washington, Robert Duvall, Anne Heche, James Woods
Starring: Denzel Washington, Robert Duvall, Anne Heche, James Woods, Ray Liotta, Kimberly Elise, Daniel E. Smith, Shawn Hatosy, Eddie Griffin, Kevin Connolly, Troy Winbush
Director: Nick Cassavetes
Director: Nick Cassavetes
Screenwriter: James Kearns
Producer: Mark Burg, Oren Koules
Composer: Aaron Zigman
Studio: New Line Cinema
Reviews for John Q
So earnest and well-meaning, and so stocked with talent, that you almost forget the sheer, ponderous awfulness of its script.
Director Nick Cassavetes and screenwriter James Kearns make Washington look silly for the first time in his career.
Content merely to lionize its title character and exploit his anger - all for easy sanctimony, formulaic thrills and a ham-fisted sermon on the need for national health insurance.
Before long, the film starts playing like General Hospital crossed with a Saturday Night Live spoof of Dog Day Afternoon.
Washington’s performance is almost unbearably heartbreaking, but more lamentable is the fact that he’s stuck in such an offensively simplistic story.
The actors and technicians help to elevate [John Q] above its source material.
A meretricious melodrama that manages to reduce serious social and economic issues to the most cheaply sensationalistic level.
...feels as if (there's) a choke leash around your neck so director Nick Cassavetes can give it a good, hard yank whenever he wants you to feel something.
It's not a perfect film by any means ... but overall, it entertained me.
The formula film survives its needless mistakes in scripting and becomes a powerful motion picture in spite of itself.
The police must contend with hoards of supporters hoping that John will come out and chant, "Attica! Attica!"
Moviegoers will enjoy the all-star cast and the near-constant tension, but they will be won over by Washington's performance and the timely cause.
The ending is a cop-out. What happens to John Q? I don't have an I Am Sam clue.
It's tough being a black man in America, especially when the Man has taken away your car, your work-hours and denied you health insurance.
The melodrama is unpleasant and the heavy-handed moralizing is entirely unnecessary.
Imagine the worst episode of Chicago Hope never aired, and it still won't even begin to describe the agonizing ordeal that is John Q.
It's bad enough Q tries to squeeze in heady messages about gun control, healthcare and workers' rights, but it also insists on playing up the button-pushing race thing.
Latest News for John Q
November 27, 2008:
Wellsphere.com: The Denzel Washington John Q Interview ![]()
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March 23, 2006:
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Tension: it's the key to many a film, and this week's wide releases bring three variants on that theme. We've got a hostage situation ("Inside Man"), class conflict... More...
February 22, 2006:
Cassavetes Working on Fact-Based "Bomb"
Filmmaker Nick Cassavetes will soon get to work on "Bombing Harvey," a fact-based tale of a Hungarian scientist who tried to plant a bomb in a Lake Tahoe casino in an... More...
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