Review: Seven Pounds (2008)
Scott Mendelson
jcknapier at gmail.com
Tue Mar 9 14:54:44 EST 2010
Seven Pounds
2008
118 minutes
rated PG-13
by Scott Mendelson
Seven Pounds is the very definition of a 'noble failure'. It is
exquisitely acted and occasionally compelling. It is the very kind of
film that 'they just don't make anymore' and I am glad for its
existence. But, taken on its own merits, it has one key flaw: it is
structured as a mystery and the film waits almost till the very end to
show most of its cards. As a result, we are cheated of the emotional
drama that the characters would be going through if we were shown all
of the details along the way.
A token amount of plot (no spoilers): Ben (Will Smith) is an IRS agent
who has been investigating several strangers, probing into their lives
for reasons not revealed. Along the way, he hits it off with one of
his 'targets', a woman with a failing heart (Rosario Dawson, in one of
her very best performances). As he gets closer to her, he realizes
that he is putting his plan in jeopardy, a plan that apparently
(according to the opening scene) involves his own suicide.
While many viewers will guess the ballgame sometime in the first act,
such knowledge lends the film a pathos that it lacks for those who
simply follow the story as given. Basically the majority of the film
has Ben encountering, interrogating and occasionally challenging
various subjects to see if they are worthy of his grand desire. The
always welcome Bill Smitrovich (from The Practice) appears as a kids'
hockey coach, while Woody Harrelson is terrific as a blind pianist
(Harrelson had quickly become one of my favorite character actors,
with fine work in The Prize Winner Of Defiance Ohio, The Walker, No
Country For Old Men, the underrated Semi-Pro, and Transsiberian).
And Will Smith himself seemingly undergoes a physical transformation
and does surprisingly potent, occasionally subtle work as a
desperately sad man with very little reason to live. Smith has finally
become an actor of substance, as this is his fourth terrific
performance in a row (following The Pursuit of Happyness, I Am Legend,
and Hancock). If nothing else, Seven Pounds works as an acting treat.
I am inclined to defend it simply because many of the criticisms seem
more about punishing the great and powerful Will Smith than about
judging the merits of his latest project. David Poland of Movie City
News correctly noted that if this were a foreign film with a lower
budget and no big stars, it would likely have received rave reviews
when it reached our shores. And while I defend the acting and the
concept, I cannot defend the structural execution, which takes a
potentially wrenching story and renders it slow, occasionally boring,
and just out of emotional reach for no reason other than to play
'gotcha' with the audience.
As for the moral questions brought up by the film, there can be some
debate as to whether the film is meant to be a tragedy or an
ultimately uplifting tale of redemption. The choices made by certain
characters will have their detractors, but there is no law saying I
must agree with the decisions made by individual people in a story in
order to enjoy said film. Let's just say I was far more saddened at
the climax that I was uplifted.
On that note, when the pieces do fall into place, the film finally
takes the emotional turn that it should have had from the get-go. Like
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, the final moments are incredibly
moving. And like that disappointing piece of Oscar bait, a stunningly
powerful final scene cannot make up for the aloof and somewhat cold
narrative that precedes it.
In the end, I recommend eventually seeing Seven Pounds for the acting
and the questions that it will provoke. It is a challenging and
thoughtful film, and the fact that it doesn't quite work does not
diminish the fact that something like this was attempted by a major
studio with the biggest star on the planet. As I said above, it is a
noble failure and I acknowledge its failure and its nobility in equal
measure. And yes, the title does make sense when you think about it.
Grade: B-
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