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‘Hancock’: Stuporman, By Kurt Loder

(Will Smith) is a new kind of . He’s a mess. One night in Miami, after a mugging, he woke up in a hospital with no , no ID and not a clue who he was. When a nurse asked for his on a form, he gave to her and then kept the name for his own. That was 80 years ago. Today, is an L.A. street drunk with a mean disposition and some offbeat abilities. He can fly, for one thing. And he can pick up a with one hand and stop a speeding locomotive with his fist. Also, as he tells his new friend Ray Embrey (Jason Bateman), “I don’t age.”

” works the slickest twist on the since “Unbreakable.” In . Night Shyamalan’s 2000 , the nature of the narrative subterfuge evolved slowly, through an accretion of odd details and sudden iconic . In “,” however, the plot twist is a delightful shock; comes winging in from way out of left field and transforms the . Unfortunately, also forces the into an ending that makes not even a tiny bit of sense. But even a flawed is rare enough, and “” is a small of its kind.

Ray meets when the shabby saves him from being flattened by a train. He already knows who is, of course; everybody does. When he’s not passed out in a nest of empty bourbon bottles, spends his time flying around town fighting crime and saving people’s lives. Everybody hates him, though, because with all his good deeds he does a lot of damage. Every time he comes soaring down out of the sky, he tears up 50 feet of neighborhood asphalt. When he tosses a beached whale back into the ocean — hurling like a big blubbery discus — naturally lands on a passing yacht. Lawsuits are piling up. TV Nancy Grace is calling for his scalp. There’s a warrant out for ’s arrest (as if any jail could hold him).

Ray, a PR guy who’s too goodhearted for his own good, knows exactly what needs: an image makeover. He takes him home for dinner, where Ray’s young son (Jae Head) is thrilled, but his wife (Charlize Theron) is appalled by ’s surly lack of social skills, and maybe something else. Ray advises his new client to turn himself in to the and voluntarily do some jail time. reluctantly agrees. With the sourpuss behind bars, the L.A. crime shoots up 30 percent, and soon, the sheriff’s request, is back on the crime-fighting beat, now togged out in a neat black-leather costume (Ray’s idea) and doing his best to be polite to people (’s hard).

The first half of the is very funny, as we watch grumping the citizenry (to a staring old lady: “I’ll break my foot off in your ass, woman”) and butting ahead of some cute kids lined up an ice-cream . (He’s just extinguished a burning building. He needs to cool down. Why can’t anybody understand?) The big plot turnaround — which comes about halfway through the , and which you have to experience for yourself — is pretty hilarious too ( also involves a rousing, sky-high battle-chase that trashes values all over town). From this point on, though, the ’s tone shifts radically. grows darker and more earthbound, and the end stretches toward tragedy. This almost works, except that the plot point on which depends — let’s say ’s the crucial importance of nearness and distance — is glaringly self-contradictory, and leaves us feeling let down and a little grumpy ourselves.

But “” is still a lot of . Will Smith remains one of the most likable of , and he’s a virtuoso of underplayed sarcasm. (He also gets props for risking his box-office rep on such wild material.) Jason Bateman is used mainly for his unassuming sweetness, and his character begins to fade in the second half of the . But Charlize Theron, radiant as always, expands her already remarkable range with a display of sharp skills.

Despite its heavy complement of expensive digital effects, the doesn’t really feel like a blockbuster (’s only about 90 minutes long). looks raw and grainy ( might have benefited from a little more visual stylization), and Peter Berg is way too fond of 360-degree -twirling. But the is unusually inventive and the script is filled with crisp, snappy dialogue, for which writers Vy Vincent Ngo and Vince Gilligan deserve a fee-boost for their next feature. They also need a good talking-to about that ending, though.

Check out everything we’ve got on “.”

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