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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
Hollywood heart-strings need a transplant
John Q, directed by Nick Cassevetes, written by James
Kearns
By J. Cooper
20 February 2002
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The release of John Q has been greeted with derision
by some in the media, who question whether anyone in his or her
right mind would want to see a movie about managed health care
in the US. As it turns out, tens of thousands filled the theaters
for the film on its opening weekend. In fact, millions of American
moviegoers undoubtedly identify with the Denzel Washington character
in John Q, who wages a desperate struggle against a system
that denies his son a life-saving heart transplant. Unfortunately,
the expectations of the audience are not met by the film, which
never delivers either the drama or a strong social message.
Washington portrays John Q. Archibald, a factory worker feeling
the effects of the Bush recovery: working a shortened
week and unable to make ends meet; his wifes car has just
been repossessed; he is doing everything he can to keep his family
going.
John is an easy-going guy. Hes a loving husband and a
devoted father to his son, Mike. When Mike collapses during a
Little League game, John and his wife Denise (Kimberly Elise)
are informed by the icy hospital director Rebecca Payne (Anne
Heche) and the arrogant heart surgeon Dr. Raymond Turner (James
Woods) that only a heart transplant will save the child and that
Johns insurance wont cover the procedure. Rebuffed
by his employers who have downgraded his insurance since he is
no longer considered to be working full-time, he is informed that
under his current coverage a heart transplant is an elective
procedure. The family must come up with a $75,000 down payment
toward the $250,000 charge just to get Mike on the donor waiting
list. Payne coldly lets them know that Mike will probably die
within months, so they should make it a happy time.
Determined to save their sons life, the Archibalds raise
money by selling everything they own, accepting donations from
friends, their church and Denises co-workers at a restaurant.
Its not enough. So when the hospital administration determines
that Mikes stay is becoming too costly and decides he must
go home to die, the ordinarily mild-mannered John Q. takes Dr.
Turner, some staff and patients hostage in the hospital emergency
room.
Veteran police negotiator Frank Grimes (Robert Duvall) is called
in to try to convince John to surrender, while the vain and politically
ambitious police chief (Ray Liotta) organizes the SWAT team to
deal with Johns criminal actions in more typical and brutal
police fashion. The stereotyped TV announcer, seeking to advance
his own career, broadcasts the siege live, but concern for the
family is obviously not his motivation. John becomes a hero to
the gathering crowds and television public.
When John announces that a new administration has taken over
the hospital, and that health care is now free for all who need
it, the audience in the movie theater applauds. Unfortunately,
there is a disappointing dichotomy between the audiences
response to the characters fight against the system and
the failure of the filmmakers to present more than a tepid melodrama,
one that never develops a thoughtful or consistent outlook on
the disastrous crisis that millions of Americans face when they
cannot afford adequate medical care.
The patients John has inadvertently taken hostage are caricatures
of the rainbow of urban America. The plot becomes
less and less believable as John threatens to kill hostages unless
his son is put on the donor list. While waiting interminably for
Payne to acquiesce to this single demand, he engages the emergency
room staff, the patients and Dr. Turner in an unfortunately pedantic
discussion as to what really happens under HMO care. The young
ER doctor (Kevin Connolly) explains to John that the likely reason
his sons condition was never recognized earlier is that
doctors are paid by HMOs not to test and diagnose expensive
medical conditions. Dr. Turner confirms that doctors are given
year-end bonuses by the HMOs for denying these services and saving
the insurance companies millions of dollars.
When the police commissioners assault fails, a cynical
scheme is presented by Grimes and Payne telling John that the
hospital will agree to his demand. Inexplicably, the steely Payne
is transformed and Mikes name somehow actually ends up on
a donor list. The cranked-up action at the end loses all credibility.
What is meant to be a tense race against the clock is dissipated
by totally misplaced laugh lines and a lack of direction.
Its a shame this is not a good film. Despite a talented
cast, the script is so conventional, the plot so weak and the
characters so shallow that John Q fails to make any clear
political point or touch us deeply. Out of the hundreds of films
released every year almost none deal with serious social issues.
The crisis in American health care is perhaps one of the most
acute of these issues, but while director Nick Cassavetesson
of director John Cassavetes and actress Gena Rowlandsand
producer Mark Burg offer a story with possibilities, they fail
to follow through with any powerful message or even clearly present
intelligent questions. Snippets of truth are expressed, particularly
through the mouth of the hospital director: 50 million people
in this country dont have health insurance.... People get
sick every day and they die every day, why should we do anything
different for this family? She lets us know that life and
death are business like every other business in America.
The film exposes the class divide that rules health care in
the US, and to its credit does not play the race card.
It laboriously demonstrates that if you have money you get taken
care of and if you dont, well, you may have to resort to
desperate measures unless things change. But what change do the
filmmakers advocate? The political issues, inevitably raised in
the film, are neither probed nor are any solutions advanced. As
the film winds to a close there are television clips of CNN talk
show host Larry King, Senator Hillary Clinton, Rev. Jesse Jackson
and other politicians and celebrities offering sound bytes for
health care reform, but the most memorable remark from a television
personality seems to hold all John Q. Publics responsible: We
are the ones who dont want our taxes raised. So, unlike
the teaser for the film (Give a father no options and you
leave him no choice), the filmmakers dont give their
audience any alternatives either.
What was perhaps more interesting than the film itself was
the audience response. When John is told that his insurance has
gone from PPO to HMO, there was an audible gasp of universal recognition
from a typical urban audience, many of whom live in circumstances
much like that of the characters on the screen. It is significant
that sold-out crowds in working class areas sought out this film
purporting to take on the health care industry and offering a
hero who exhausts all legal and acceptable means to resolve his
predicament. The audience clearly identifies with John Q. but
is left with very little new to consider, and no real insight
into the fundamental cause of the class-biased health-care system
in America.
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