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Seven Pounds Movie Review
Seven Pounds Review

"Seven Pounds" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Gabriele MuccinoProducer : Todd Black,Jason Blumenthal,James Lassiter,Will Smith,Steve Tisch
Screenwiter : Grant Nieporte
Starring : Will Smith,Rosario Dawson,Woody Harrelson,Michael Ealy,Barry Pepper,Andy Milder,Elpidia Carrillo
Consumed by remorse and despair, a successful businessman gives up all hope
after accidentally killing six strangers and his beloved wife. To make amends,
he decides to off himself and donate his bodily organs to seven strangers.
That's Seven Pounds in a nutshell, and it sounds more like Saw 6 than a holiday
drama reuniting Pursuit of Happyness director Gabriele Muccino with Will Smith.
But unlike Happyness, the feel-good movie of 2006, Seven Pounds is just the
opposite -- a feel-bad movie -- and its unpleasant aftertaste lingers in your
mouth for days. After watching this depression-inducing saga of sadness, you'll
need a Zoloft prescription.
Believe it or not, though, the above synopsis doesn't spoil anything because
Seven Pounds reveals the main character's suicide in the opening scene.
"There's been a suicide," Ben (Will Smith) tells a 911 operator. "Who's the
victim?" the operator asks. Ben replies, "Me."
The movie then flashes back, showing Ben -- a Los Angeles IRS agent --
investigating the moral fibers of several strangers. First, he finds that a
local doctor (Tim Kelleher) with health problems abuses patients from time to
time. Then, he talks with Ezra Turner (Woody Harrelson), a blind pianist who
works as a phone operator at a meat company. There's also a poor Hispanic woman
name Connie (Elpidia Carrillo) who cannot endure her husband's physical abuse
any longer. They all need something from Ben... they just don't know it yet.
Soon, Ben runs into Emily Posa (Rosario Dawson), a lonely woman with a serious
heart condition that may kill her unless they find a donor soon. The two hit it
off quickly and begin an unexpected romantic fling. At this point, the film
transforms from goal-oriented drama to lackadaisical romance. It's a direction
that's so different from the first half that it's as if there are two separate
movies here. There's a way to blend the contrasting ideas, but Muccino and
writer Grant Nieporte miscalculate the transition and find themselves
wandering, seemingly without focus or direction.
To the movie's credit, Smith delivers his best performance since Ali. He's come
a long way since his Fresh Prince of Bel-Air days, and his maturity as an actor
is aptly demonstrated in Seven Pounds. In one of his most emotional roles to
date, Smith tackles the drama fearlessly. His performance appears effortless
and never feels forced or contrived. He's a breath of fresh air in an otherwise
overwrought picture.
But in the end, there's a difference between dark, honest dramas, and movies
that are just plain downers. The gut-wrenching Hunger, Revolutionary Road, and
The Wrestler are three recent films -- also in some sense about characters who
give up -- that are much more difficult to watch than Seven Pounds. But those
films don't disguise themselves as inspirational dramas. They are pit bulls,
not poodles, and they present themselves honestly. This movie has edge, but it
wants to be the bastard child of Happyness. It's a razor blade wrapped inside a
teddy bear.
Anyone know what a human head weighs?
Reviewer: Blake French
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