WARNING: Spoilers Ahead!
2014 seems to be ushering in the age of the mediocre
biblical epic.
February brought us the underwhelming Son of God, which
was essentially a glorified made-for-TV movie. Later this year, Christian Bale and Ridley Scott will look
to enter the next Oscar race with Exodus: Gods and Kings, about Moses leading
the Israelites out of Egypt. Until then, Black Swan director Darren Aronofsky offers us
a re-imagining of the tale of Noah’s Ark.
In Noah, the titular character (Russell Crowe) is chosen
by God to save creation before a massive deluge wipes the earth clean of human
wickedness.
Apparently that wickedness doesn't include the first half of
this movie, which is one of the worst hours of fantasy cinema I've ever seen.
I know it is Aronofsky’s own vision of the story, but it’s
just such a departure from the source material that it’s nearly impossible to
buy into. I could talk all day about the unforgivable differences, but
I’ll spare you. Just know that there are giant rock monsters, magic gold
stones, a magic snakeskin, a mine that looks like something out of the 1950s, an old man who can magically
heal reproductive organs and a massive army which tries to steal the ark away.
I must’ve missed those chapters in Genesis.
It’s not until everyone’s been on the ark for a while that
things start to turn around for this film adaptation.
After months adrift, Noah becomes so blinded by his duty to
God that he forgets his duty to his family. He believes that humanity is meant
to die out with the last of his line. Noah still has his three sons from the Bible – Shem (Douglas
Booth), Ham (Logan Lerman), and Japheth (Leo McHugh Carroll) – but only Shem
has a wife.
Emma Watson turns in her finest performance to date as Ila,
Shem’s wife. For fear of giving too much more away, I’ll just say that
the dysfunctional family dynamic works like a charm here - especially between
Watson, Crowe, and Jennifer Connolly who plays Noah’s wife Naameh.
These are
three players at the top of their respective games.
Watching Noah’s psychosis unfold in these moments is a treat
because Crowe plays it so well. I can’t imagine anyone tasked with saving the
last of God’s creation NOT getting a little stir-crazy after months at sea with
the family.
Aronofsky’s script lends depth to the character that we
don’t quite get from the writings in scripture. I guess you could say Noah is the Dark Knight of
biblical epics for about half of its run time.
That’s not such a bad thing because again, this is only a
movie. I like movies that have layered characters, and I love watching the
relationships between these kinds of characters unfold. If judged solely on
that merit alone, then Noah succeeds wonderfully.
If judged solely on how close it sticks to scripture,
especially in the first hour, then Noah deserves to be washed away in the
flood.
C+
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