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Can Will Smith Become a Major Movie Star Again?

Los Angeles World Premiere Of Warner Bros. Pictures "Focus"
Gregg DeGuire—WireImage/Getty Images Will Smith arrives at the Los Angeles World Premiere of Focus at TCL Chinese Theatre on Feb. 24, 2015 in Hollywood, Calif.

The star is a long way from his box-office heights

It’s hard to remember now, but once upon a time, Will Smith was the king of the multiplex.

Smith, who’s attempting to stage a big-screen comeback with this weekend’s heist caper Focus, had a great track record in the 1990s (1995’s Bad Boys, 1996’s Independence Day) and then an uninterrupted string of hits in the mid-to-late 2000s. The star tossed off one surefire hit a year: I, Robot (2004); Hitch (2005); The Pursuit of Happyness (2006); I Am Legend (2007); Hancock (2008). That last film, a subversive movie about a superhero who wasted his powers, was a brilliant parable for the years ahead.

In project after project, Smith brought his charisma and his fame to bear on unworthy projects. Each of his post-Hancock projects had some fatal flaw that must have seemed alluring to the actor: Seven Pounds (2008), about a man seeking opportunities to donate all of his organs to “worthy” people, had all of the sentimentalism of Happyness but pushed it past logical sense. Men in Black 3 (2012) was a too-safe return to a well that had run creatively dry; After Earth (2013) presumed the audience would be at once deeply interested in both Smith’s son Jaden as a leading man, in the Smith family’s vaguely-defined mystical beliefs, and in M. Night Shyamalan as a director. The collaboration with Shyamalan, a director deeply out of vogue after a series of bombs, spoke as clearly to Smith’s remove from on-the-ground realities as did an infamous interview he and Jaden gave to New York. (Asked if he alphabetized his laserdiscs, Smith replied, “I’m very, very serious about systems supporting creative inspiration.” It was that kind of interview.)

Smith claimed, then, that he was not interested in fame, a claim belied by the fact that all of his movies have been either blockbusters or would-be blockbusters that the public rejected. Whatever was wrong with last year’s Smith flop Winter’s Tale, it wasn’t a lack of bombast or sweep. But it is true that throughout his career, Smith has been resistant to the sort of innovative projects that turn an actor into an icon. His movies that succeeded did so because of their easily digestible conceits, while the ones that failed did so because the formula had turned against Smith. The star famously turned down both The Matrix and Django Unchained; the argument for him as a generation-defining movie star is more mathematical than it is based on real affection.

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That math has turned against Smith, and wouldn’t seem to be getting any better. Focus, an attractive trifle, was dumped into the late-winter box office doldrums, and is attracting far more press for rising star Margot Robbie’s appearance than for anything Smith does. The most promising moves, for Smith, lie in the future, in particular with his appearance as the villainous Deadshot in 2016’s Suicide Squad, based on the villains from the DC Comics universe. The franchise onboarding one of the world’s best-known actors, rather than seeking, as Marvel has done several times over, to build a star from something found in a Hollywood gym, has the feeling of a corporate merger, but Will Smith’s strength has always been in his extreme packageability.

It may seem perverse to say that an actor’s appearance in a comic-book movie is cause for celebration, but Smith attaching himself to an existing property may be the way he climbs out of the hole he’s in. Will Smith’s name on a poster can no longer sell movie tickets. That he’s apparently realized that and acted accordingly, joining a large ensemble rather than bending a movie to his will and agreeing to be a villain rather than a hero, is the first proof in a while that Smith, for years the most astute movie star in the game, really is focused.

Read next: Review: Focus: Can Will Smith Do Cary Grant?

See All the Best Actors in Oscar History

Schauspieler Emil Jannings Warner Baxter George Arliss (1868-1946), English actor, 20th century. Cinema Personalities. pic: circa 1930's. American actor Lionel Barrymore. (1878-1954) a major star of films and a famed actor. He was also noted as a artist, author, composer and director, one of the famous Barrymore acting family. Fredric March Wallace Beery Charles Laughton Clark Gable Victor McLaglen, British boxer and actor, 1934-1935. Paul Muni, American film actor, 1934-1935. Spencer Tracy Robert Donat James Stewart Cooper Promo Shot Paul Lukas Bing Crosby Ray Milland Portrait of Ronald Colman Portrait Of Laurence Olivier Broderick Crawford José Ferrer in Anything Can Happen Humphrey Bogart In 'Sabrina' WILLIAM HOLDEN 1953 Marlon Brando Ernest Borgnine Yul Brynner Barnacle Bill David Niven Charlton Heston dressed as Ben Hur Burt Lancaster Maximillian Schell Gregory Peck Publicity Still From 'For Love Of Ivy' Rex Harrison In 'My Fair Lady' Lee Marvin Paul Scofield In 'A Man For All Seasons' In The Heat of the Night Cliff Robertson John Wayne Patton Gene Hackman In 'The French Connection' Jack Lemmon 47th Annual Academy Awards, 1975 Jack Nicholson In 'One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest' Peter Finch In 'Network' 35th Annual Golden Globe Awards AFI Salute to James Stewart Actor's Studio Conference JAN 2 1980, AUG 12 1982, AUG 13 1982, MAR 18 1983; At ceremonies at the Denver Center for the Perfor Ben Kingsley Robert Duvall 57th Annual Academy Awards Nominees Luncheon William Hurt The Color Of Money People's Choice 62nd Annual Academy Awards Nominees Luncheon 16th Annual Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards American Museum of the Moving Image Tribute to Al Pacino Tom Hanks 1996 National Board of Review Awards Dinner 4th Broadcast Film Critics Awards Celebs at British Academy Film Awards 74th Annual Academy Awards - Pressroom The 75th Annual Academy Awards - Press Room Sean Penn arrives for the 76th Academy A Onset For Jamie Foxx Music Video Stars Promote 'Mission Impossible III' In Rome 22nd Annual Santa Barbara Film Festival - American Riviera Award Presented to Forest Whitaker 9th Annual New York Times Arts & Leisure Weekend - Day 3 The Debt - UK Premiere - Inside Arrivals BAFTA Los Angeles 18th Annual Awards Season Tea Party - Red Carpet 86th Annual Academy Awards - Press Room US-OSCARS-GOVERNORS BALL 88th Annual Academy Awards - Press Room 89th Annual Academy Awards -  Press Room TOPSHOT-US-OSCARS-PRESSROOM RAMI MALEK

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