The locomotive in the train wreck was a low-powered switching engine. Dozens and dozens of rail cars kept piling up, yet that engine would not have been powerful enough to pull such a long train in the first place. [It is very possible that there were multiple engines pulling the train, it actually is quite common to have more than one.]
Great sites
Quotes
Hancock: I apologize to the people of Los Angeles. My behavior has been improper and I accept the consequences. I ask my fellow Angelinos for their patience and understanding. Life here can be difficult for me. After all, I am the only one of my kind. During my incarceration, I will be participating in alcohol and anger management treatment. You deserve better from me. I can be better. I will be better.
Mistakes
When Hancock puts the woman on the hospital bed near the end of the movie when he walks out he walks into the metal bar holding the window in place and as a result it bends. In the next shot where you see the frame it doesn't even have a scratch let alone being bent. See more...
Trivia
Will Smith has his own signature line, which is called 'Oh Hell no.' He says it at least once in almost all his movies, including this one. See more...
Hancock (2008) - 15 corrections
Directed by Peter Berg, starring Will Smith, Jason Bateman, Charlize Theron (add more)
Genres: Action, Comedy, Crime, Drama, Fantasy, Thriller
Comments made in brackets are corrections from other visitors. As such, any aggressive/abusive corrections (and I get quite a few) written as if they're comments I've made myself will be ignored. To submit your own corrections for mistakes, just click the edit icon under an entry, then choose "correct entry". Some entries have "duplicated entry" after them - these are entries which were already listed on the main page, but were submitted again. I occasionally leave these online for a while, just in case they were moved in error, so don't worry about pointing them out to me.
The locomotive in the train wreck was a low-powered switching engine. Dozens and dozens of rail cars kept piling up, yet that engine would not have been powerful enough to pull such a long train in the first place. [It is very possible that there were multiple engines pulling the train, it actually is quite common to have more than one.]
When Hancock tells Michel to call him a-hole one more time and throws him into the air, notice that when the boy Hancock called "Thickness" looks up in the air he wears glasses but they suddenly disappear. [The glasses are on the kid he calls "Goggles" not, "Thickness". BUT in between the two shots, "Thickness" manages to change his shirt, hair color, and body build. "Goggles" manages to change his shirt, glasses, and ethnicity. So obviously, they are not the same children in both shots.]
Spoiler Alert: When the 'superwoman' tells Hancock that they were built in pairs so that they could live together and die together, it completely contradicts what happens at the end of the film. As she is is lying dead on the hospital bed, Hancock uses the last of his strength to move far away from her, thus causing her to live again and both of them start becoming immortal once more. If this is the case, then when one of their kind dies, as long as the one who is alive is far enough, the being that died will come back to life and both will become immortal again. [She explains to him that there is a reason why they lose their powers over time when they pair up, and that is so that they can grow old and die together like normal mortals. SO, presumably the others died because they chose to become mortals and live normal human lifetimes.]
(SPOILER ALERT) When Hancock returns in the morning after he has been tossed out of the house by Mary, he tries to stab her with a fork only to see it bend when she is stabbed. But later you find out that when these two are close to each other, their powers weaken and they can be killed and shot, just like normal people. [Their powers weaken over a long stretch of time. Hancock still has all of his powers for some time after being around Mary, then gradually loses individual abilities. At this point in the movie Mary still had the power of impermeability.]
After Hancock gets called out of jail, the officer tells him to rescue the cop that's down. The criminals pull out the rocket launcher and it pans over to a view of the officer when she is near the tire of the police car. But when Hancock gets to her, she's moved to the middle of the car somehow. [She was shot, but not incapacitated. There was time between the cuts for her to move to the center of the car.]
In the beginning of the movie when Hancock stops the robbers and impales the SUV on the building, the engine should come out from the hood. Instead spires penetrate the engine block. [The engine "should"? One engine mount can have broken, tilting the motor over in its compartment, allowing the spire to pass through without the engine protruding.]
John Hancock and Mary Embrey are both endowed with super powers, such as flight, healing ability, and invulnerability. The latter is demonstrated in that Hancock was unable to receive an IV when he was checked into the hospital (in the 1930s) as the needle simply broke off. How then is Mary able to have pierced ears? A needle would have broken, and even then, the wound would heal rapidly. [As seen in the movie, they lose their invulnerabilities when they are near each other. She might have gotten her ears pierced on one of those occasions. As to why the puncture didn't heal, that depends on the nature of their healing powers. If she was careful to leave an earring or something in the hole to prevent it from closing, it is not unlikely that she could keep her piercings, circumventing the healing power.]
Hancock meets up with the super powered woman, who explains to him that he will start losing his powers the longer he's near by. Problem is, when he gets shot in the liquor store, he's nowhere near her. Even if he had just come directly from their home it wouldn't matter, because later in the movie it's established that Hancock regains his powers when he's only a few feet away from her in a very short time. (When he's leaps out the window, she miraculously awakens.) And he'd only been out of her sight for a few moments before he's up and flying again. [She told Hancock in the hospital that the "power lost" has never been this fast before, so either the writers caught the goof in time or it really is planned.]
Hancock is all bulletproof, of course. But that shouldn't make his new, black superhero suit prepared by his PR manager bulletproof, too. When he is going into the war-zone in the bank robbery sequence, you can see the bullets bouncing off his suit, making no hole whatsoever. However, we know that his superpowers do not extend to his clothes, evidenced by his sunglasses being broken by bullets, and all his clothes burnt off due to a fire. [We do not know what the suit is made of. It could be kevlar which would make it bullet proof.]
After Hancock is shot and taken to the hospital, the press and police are swarming the place, trying to get a statement from the husband as he enters. With people everywhere and all eyes on Hancock, how did a group of heavily armed men all dressed in black casually walk in and start attacking? We're led to assume they snuck in, since no weapons are shown when we see the henchmen in the hallway, and the leader (Red) rides up the same elevator with the husband and son. [They were dressed in official looking clothes and were able to pass as members of the SWAT team.]
(Spoiler Alert) Hancock is shot after losing his powers because he's been spending too much time around the other super heroine. And she's aware of this. She knows for a fact he's losing his powers, and she's well aware that this has happened several times before, which is why she left him in the first place. So what on earth possesses her to walk into the hospital and up to Hancock to tell him that face to face? She could have called the hospital, or given the message to her son or husband, since she knows full well that Hancock becomes vulnerable when she's around and she knows he's injured. She left him in the first place so he could heal up, so why would she choose to visit him now instead of at least waiting a few hours? (Hell, she left him alone for years, a few hours won't kill her.) [Character choice, not a movie mistake. She didn't know that people were coming to kill him. Obviously not able to get through to him on the hospital phones (people who are shot don't usually receive phone calls), she figured she would be safe to meet him briefly and explain why she can't be around him anymore.]
If Hancock and Mary are connected (as established out of nowhere through the lengthy fight scene towards the end of the movie in the hospital, where Hancock takes the blows, and the damage appears on Mary's body), how does Mary flatline, and Hancock get up and leave in order to save her? Not to mention that, considering the focus they made on the 'connection' since Mary was on the threshold of death, a leap out a window should have left Hancock splattered all over the ground. [It requires a suspension of disbelief, but Hancock pulls together his last bit of strength to get out of the hospital. Sort of like Superman lifting a continent of Kryptonite in "Superman Returns"; super heroes are constantly called upon to use their last bit of reserve energy when the chips are down.]
In scene where Hancock speaks to super woman in the kitchen after the bank robbery part, she spots a bruise on Hancock's hand, when the only chance he had to get bruised was in the bank, which was far away from her. [Plenty of time between the robbery and him showing up at the house with a bruise. ]
There's inconsistency in Hancock's strength. When he stops the car in the beginning of the movie, he needs a few meters. When he stops the train, he doesn't move even one inch. [He's just as strong in both events. In the car his body is in motion with the SUV; he digs his heels into the pavement and pulls the car to a stop. On the tracks he braces himself against the pavement from a standing position and gets hit by the train. Obviously something to do with his powers. Whenever he's in motion (like all his first attempts at landing) he tears up pavement when trying to stop; when bracing himself standing still he becomes an immovable object.]
You may also like: Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull | Iron Man | The Dark Knight | The Incredible Hulk | Back to the Future Part III





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