Genre: Comedy
Director: Tom Shadyac
Cast: Steve Carell, Morgan Freeman, Wanda Sykes,
Lauren Graham, Jimmy Bennett, John Goodman, Steve Oedekerk,
John Michael Higgins, Molly Shannon, Jonah Hill, Ed Helms
RunTime: 1 hr 35 mins
Released By: UIP
Rating: PG
Official Website: www.evanalmighty.com
Opening Day: 30 August 2007
Synopsis:
Newly elected to Congress, Evan leaves the city of Buffalo
behind and shepherds his family to suburban northern Virginia.
Once there, his life gets turned upside-down when God appears
and mysteriously commands him to build an ark. But his befuddled
family just can't decide whether Evan is having an extraordinary
midlife crisis or is truly onto something of Biblical proportions…
Movie Review:
What
happens when you take a biblical story of mythic proportions
and transposed it to modern-day America? Try lots of press,
sneering Congressmen, the generally skeptical public and a
disbelieving family – yup, you guessed it, it’s
the Iraq invasion all over again!
Just
kidding, really. Evan Almighty, the supposed sequel to Bruce
Almighty, has Steve Carrell of The 40 Year Old Virgin fame
(watch for the priceless insider joke on this one) playing
God’s reluctant minion instead of Jim Carrey. Not that
it’s a bad thing since surprisingly this sequel has
very little to do with the original except for Morgan Freeman
reprising his role as a nudge-nudge-wink-wink-type God. Besides,
Carrey probably declined doing the sequel since he freaked
out on animals way back in Ace Ventura: Pet Detective –
and plenty of animals this film does offer.
Heady
from his new win as Congressman where he recklessly vows to
“Change the world”, Baxter moves into a spanking
new house with his family in the middle of what seems to be
an ultra-posh residential development project. However, he
finds himself unable to shake off an unwelcome visitor –
the Almighty himself. Ominously predicting a Great Flood Event
that is imminent, God makes Evan tetchy by dumping a huge
pile of wood at his doorstep, and then siccing all his creations
onto him, making Evan’s life a living hell. Caught between
a rock and a hard place, Evan has little choice but to agree
to God’s bidding, which is to build an Ark (guided by
directions from “Ark-Building For Dummies”) together
with his family and to convince all of humankind to come aboard
before they perish in agony.
I
don’t know about back then, but sniggering neighbours
still do affect you whether you exist in biblical times or
in the present-day. Evan gets derided as the neighbourhood
looney, being called names like “New York’s Noah”
and “The Crazy Man With A Beard”, growing into
his role as the disregarded naysayer with hilarious results,
thereby displaying the fact that the Almighty, too, can have
an acerbic sense of humor. While the plot is bone-thin, the
premise alone provides ample fodder for hilarious visual gags
and an abundance of witty one-liners, which screenwriter Steve
Odekerk (of the insanely asinine Kung Pow: The Legend fame),
much to his credit, manages to pull off with maximum panache
and minimum tackiness.
A
word of warning, however – while the dialogue may get
the audience giggling at times, this does not make up for
the degree of suspension of disbelief that the movie requires.
While it seems incredible enough that Evan, his wife and three
hyperactive sons are able to build an Ark of biblical proportions,
I had real difficulty buying the bit about the animals. The
movie takes place somewhere near Washington D.C., so the appearance
of lions, pandas, polar bears, tigers, giraffes and elephants
do take a bit of explaining, unless there was a massive zoo
break-out in the vicinity. Lastly, the truly awful CGI shots
of the flood of also help in destroying any vestiges of respectability
this film might hope to earn, thereby proving that if you
want to tackle a serious subject matter albeit in a comedic
light, try budgeting more for your special effects than the
producers of Jumanji.
While
Evan Almighty probably won’t rank up there as one of
this year’s best offerings, and we certainly won’t
be hearing of it come Oscars season, it does throw up some
interesting questions about the human condition if you actually
bothered to think about it enough. With two millennia of history
behind us, have we really evolved as a species? If Jesus were
to come back today, would we not still leave him to die on
a cross? Perhaps that’s really too much to read into
a lame sequel that would probably disappear from our collective
memory in the time it takes for you to reach home from the
cinema, but with fluff this light passing off as comedy screening,
you really have little choice but to allow your mind to wander
a little.
Movie Rating:
(Hollywood must be really running low on inspiration
if this biblical fable about a modern day Noah is anything
to go by)
Review by Ninart Lui
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