REVIEW: JACK (1996)


                                                                                
                                     JACK                                       
                       A film review by James Berardinelli                      
                        Copyright 1996 James Berardinelli                       
                                                                                
RATING (0 TO 10): 8.5                                                           
Alternative Scale: ***1/2 out of ****                                           
                                                                                
United States, 1996                                                             
Release date: 8/9/96 (wide)                                                     
Running Length: 1:53                                                            
MPAA Classification: PG-13 (Mature themes)                                      
Theatrical Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1                                                 
                                                                                
Cast: Robin Williams, Diane Lane, Brian Kerwin, Jennifer Lopez,                 
      Adam Zolotin, Bill Cosby, Fran Drescher                                   
Director: Francis Ford Coppola                                                  
Producers: Ricardo Mestres, Fred Fuchs, and Francis Ford Coppola                
Screenplay: James DeMonaco & Gary Nadeau                                        
Cinematography: John Toll                                                       
Music: Michael Kamen                                                            
U.S. Distributor: Hollywood Pictures                                            
                                                                                
     It strikes me that there are certain similarities between JACK and         
PHENOMENON.  Both use relative innocents as their central characters.           
Both attempt to attract a mature audience.  And, most importantly, both         
offer drama-based alternatives to the relentless action films that have         
come to characterize the summer of 1996.  However, while PHENOMENON             
failed because of poor scripting, JACK is an unqualified success.  If           
there's going to be a sleeper hit this summer, JACK is a reasonable             
candidate.  This feel-good motion picture is intelligently written and          
expertly directed -- qualities which many similar movies cannot boast.          
Cross BIG with FORREST GUMP, and you get an idea of where JACK's appeal         
lies.                                                                           
                                                                                
     The premise for JACK, although seemingly simple, is riddled with           
potential problems -- nearly all of which the script not only addresses,        
but answers without a whiff of condescension.  Jack is born when his            
mother is only ten weeks pregnant.  The doctors are immediately aware           
that something strange is going on.  Eventually, they arrive at an              
explanation.  The child has an internal clock that's ticking four times         
faster than usual.  So, by the time Jack turns ten, he appears like a           
40-year old man (Robin Williams).                                               
                                                                                
      Until the fall of his eleventh year, Jack has been taught by a            
tutor (Bill Cosby).  But, after careful consideration, his mother (Diane        
Lane) and father (Brian Kerwin) agree that he should give public school         
a try, despite children's' propensity for name-calling and finger-              
pointing.  So, one morning, Jack ventures into Nathaniel Hawthorne              
Elementary School to meet his fifth grade teacher, Miss Marquez                 
(Jennifer Lopez), and his classmates.                                           
                                                                                
     The script for JACK, credited to James DeMonaco and Gary Nadeau, is        
a well-balanced mix of drama and comedy.  It's rarely maudlin, and              
manages to be affecting without heavy-handed manipulation.  The film has        
an excellent grasp of what it's like to be in fifth grade.  Jack endures        
all the painful isolation of a "different" child, but, gradually, as he         
makes friends (by dominating schoolground basketball games and offering         
to buy PENTHOUSE magazines), he begins to fit in.  It's perhaps an              
idealized vision of elementary school, but there are enough aspects of          
reality not to jolt our suspension of disbelief.                                
                                                                                
     One of the most difficult issues JACK has to deal with is the title        
character's rapid aging.  If he looks like he's forty at ten, that means        
he'll be lucky to live past twenty.  When his teacher asks him what he          
wants to be when he grows up, Jack's answer is succinct and poignant:           
"Alive."  Mr. Woodruff, Jack's tutor, describes him this way:  "You're a        
shooting star amongst ordinary stars... A shooting star passes quickly,         
but, while it's here, it's the most beautiful thing you'll ever want to         
see."  The movie never shies away from confronting Jack's mortality.            
                                                                                
     Robin Williams is entirely believable as a ten-year old.  He has           
all the mannerisms and vocal inflections perfected -- whining when he           
doesn't get his way, pulling at his shirts, adjusting his pants, and so         
forth.  It's almost as if he regressed back into childhood for the              
duration of filming.  (Then again, has Williams ever really grown up?)          
The only recent movie where an adult so perfectly emulated a child was          
BIG, and, indeed, JACK has much in common with the Tom Hanks feature,           
both in terms of subject matter and broad audience appeal.  Williams            
brings a lot of humor to his portrayal, but, with Francis Ford Coppola          
in control, the comic's eccentricities are kept carefully under reign,          
and this results in a near-perfect performance.                                 
                                                                                
     The supporting cast is surprisingly solid.  Diane Lane, Brian              
Kerwin, and Fran Drescher are not known as strong actors, but each is           
equal to their secondary roles here.  Bill Cosby, playing a fifty-              
something man with a lot of child inside, steals several scenes.                
Jennifer Lopez has a touching moment where she is forced to turn down           
Jack's offer to accompany him to a school dance.  And Adam Zolotin is           
good as Louis, Jack's best friend.                                              
                                                                                
     JACK has something to offer just about everyone.  It's good-               
natured, funny, heartwarming, and capable of being viewed on more than          
one level.  Children will relate to JACK differently than their parents,        
although, with its "soft" PG-13, the film isn't for the very young.             
With the release of COURAGE UNDER FIRE a few weeks ago, and now JACK,           
this summer's theatrical options are brightening.  For Robin Williams,          
don't be surprised if his name is mentioned early next year when Academy        
Award Nominations are given out.  JACK deserves that sort of                    
recognition.                                                                    
                                                                                
- James Berardinelli                                                            
e-mail: berardin@bc.cybernex.net                                                
ReelViews web site: http://www.cybernex.net/~berardin