A ridiculous fantasy

Kiley 2022-04-19 09:01:44

This was the original version of the Chinese one. It was better, but not because of the movie itself. This version also had some illogical plot, just not that much. This one is focused on the society and the insurance system. That is why I thought this version was better. John was a great father. He could do everything for her son, even ruining this world. All I see in this movie just a yelling father. His thinking was shallow and rejected any explain from anyone. What he want was very simple, like he said, just "sick and help". But how is that possible that everyone who want some help all do something like this. The whole society will crash. The more the people accepted this movie. The more it's a ridiculous fantasy.

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Extended Reading
  • Margarete 2021-11-16 08:01:29

    1. It's quite touching. Dad's courage to commit suicide for his son at last is impressive. 2. In the United States, even people living at the bottom know that the government is responsible for collecting so many taxes and will fight for it. . In China, the people who have been squeezed out, especially the 900 million farmers, have spent their entire lives for the country, but have gained nothing. The hard-working and kind-hearted people have no complaints about this. This is our parents.

  • Naomie 2022-03-23 09:01:43

    Movies I watched a long time ago...comparatively speaking...and touching at the same time

John Q quotes

  • Employee Manager: [in his office] Your policy has changed, Mr. Archibald.

    John Q. Archibald: [sitting in front of him] Changed to what?

    Employee Manager: Yeah, we recently switched carriers from a PPO to a HMO. It's a less expensive policy, but unfortunately, there are some restrictions.

    John Q. Archibald: What kind of restrictions?

    Employee Manager: Here's how it works: Non-management part-time employees, such as yourself, only qualify for second tier catastrophic coverage.

    John Q. Archibald: No, no. I'm not part-time. I'm full-time. It's just slow right now.

    Employee Manager: Sure, but your coverage is based on hours worked and like I said, you only qualify for second tier. And that has a maximum payout limit of $20,000.

    John Q. Archibald: [shocked] What? Wha- I-I mean-I mean, you guys have been taking money out of my paycheck every week. I've been paying into this policy for years.

    Employee Manager: Right. And that's why we're gonna cover you for the full twenty.

    John Q. Archibald: You can't be right. I mean, come on. Alright, let me get this straight: You're telling me that you have dropped me from full-time to part-time. You switched carriers. Now you're telling me I'm not fully covered? Even though I got a policy that says I am?

    Employee Manager: It doesn't seem right, does it?

    John Q. Archibald: No, it doesn't seem right. I mean, my son is sick. If I'm not covered, I've got a serious problem.

    Employee Manager: I understand that, uh, but there's nothing I can do. Look, you can file for an appeal.

    John Q. Archibald: Yeah?

    Employee Manager: [hands John an appeal application] Here you go. That takes about seven working days.

  • Rebecca Payne: [in her office] No, no, no. This is an appeal. An appeal is for an already existing claim. What you needed to file was a grievance. You filed the wrong paperwork.

    John Q. Archibald: [sitting in front of her] Wait a minute...

    Rebecca Payne: You're gonna have to resubmit. It could take up to 30 days.

    John Q. Archibald: [turns frustrated] Look, I don't have 30 days.

    Rebecca Payne: I know you don't.

    John Q. Archibald: And quite frankly, I'm getting sick of the runaround. Now what I need is my son's name...

    Rebecca Payne: Mr. Archibald, your account is in access of $30,000. The hospital has been over backwards to help you out.

    John Q. Archibald: Is that right?

    Rebecca Payne: Yes! It is right. But there's a limit to our generosity. Once and for all, your insurance does not cover this.