11 Comments

  1. annalisa

    This is a recent article from Esquire where Smith admits that After Earth is a flop. Interesting!

    The ‘Focus’ actor opened up about the highs and lows of his career and son Jaden Smith in a recent interview with Esquire.

    Over the span of Will Smith’s 25-year career, there’s one film in particular that has taught the actor a “valuable lesson.”
    In a recent interview with Esquire [2], Smith revealed that when 2013’s sci-fi film After Earth [3], in which he starred alongside son Jaden Smith, bombed at the box office (grossing a total of $60.5 million domestically), he realized he had been seeking success in all of the wrong places.

    “That was the most painful failure in my career. Wild Wild West was less painful than After Earth because my son was involved in After Earth and I led him into it. That was excruciating,” Smith admitted. “What I learned from that failure is how you win. I got reinvigorated after the failure of After Earth. I stopped working for a year and a half. I had to dive into why it was so important for me to have number-one movies. And I never would have looked at myself in that way.”
    But upon hearing the news that the father-son project he’d worked so hard for had unexpectedly tanked, Smith only had about half an hour to let it all sink in.
    “I get the box-office numbers on Monday and I was devastated for about twenty-four minutes, and then my phone rang and I found out my father had cancer. That put it in perspective —viciously,” he recalled.

    As a young teen, it was a failed relationship that sparked the actor’s desire to be the best, which later translated to box-office domination. “I was a guy who, when I was fifteen my girlfriend cheated on me, and I decided that if I was number one, no woman would ever cheat on me,” he said. “All I have to do is make sure that no one’s ever better than me and I’ll have the love that my heart yearns for.”

    Smith added, “That Monday [following the opening weekend of After Earth] started the new phase of my life, a new concept: Only love is going to fill that hole. You can’t win enough, you can’t have enough money, you can’t succeed enough. There is not enough. The only thing that will ever satiate that existential thirst is love. And I just remember that day I made the shift from wanting to be a winner to wanting to have the most powerful, deep, and beautiful relationships I could possibly have.”

  2. I respect your thoughts on Star Trek: Into Darkness, but I don’t understand how you did not find some surprises in that film. Let how there are Khan’s people in the torpedoes and how the Admiral Marcus was one of the antagonists, ready to kill so many people in order to keep him in ‘the chair.’ Honestly, I cannot say anything regarding several of the other films you mentioned in your writing, but I can definitely relate to your thoughts on movies being too predictable in their plots.

    Sincerely,
    the Trekkie who cannot speak Klingon (sadly)

  3. This is extremely interesting. Like yourself, I’m no film connoisseur, but I do enjoy good movies. I’ve never seen this movie so I wouldn’t know much about what you wrote about. However, I understand where you’re coming from with the whole plot thing. Everything is so predictable these days. Now, I’m definitely not as good at figuring out the plot twists and everything as you are, but if you want something that might stump you, I would definitely recommend the film Now You See Me. After watching it, I realized I never would have been able to guess what happens. It’s also quite a creative movie. Aside from all that, this is a well written review and I understood it despite not knowing about who or what you were referring to.

  4. Miranda Orcutt

    At first glance, I wasn’t even sure what the title of the review meant (I had to look up the word schmaltzy and come to the realization that it wasn’t referring to some film director’s last name), so I thought that perhaps other parts of the review would confuse me. But I really enjoyed reading the review, and I understood it perfectly. It was rather refreshing to read a review that didn’t simply offer a general outline of the film and highlight high points and low points. It was witty, personal, and fun. You focused more on why such a movie made it to the big screen in the first place, referencing other cinema along the way. I loved the phrases “son launcher” and “schmaltzy nepotism” (there’s that word again).

  5. This article confused me a little. Was it one thought on “Schmaltzy Sci-Fi Hits Summer Screens? or was it a collection of movies that did not intellectually challenge you?

  6. Matthew Case

    So are you saying that Will Smith purposely acted in a terrible movie to promote his son? Because when I saw the preview I thought, “This is going to be an awful movie” but then I saw Will Smith and thought, “Well it is Will Smith. Maybe it’s better than I think it is.” Interesting thought.

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