
3.5 out of 4 stars
Directed by Darren Aronofsky
Starring: Russell Crowe, Jennifer Connelly, Ray Winstone, Emma Watson, Logan Lerman, Anthony Hopkins, Douglas Booth, Madison Davenport, Nick Nolte (voice), Mark Margolis (voice), Frank Langella (voice)
Rated PG-13 for violence, disturbing images and brief suggestive content.
Verdict: Love it of hate it, it's unlikely that we'll ever see the likes of NOAH again anytime soon. More of a Darren Aronofsky film than a "Bible film", it interprets the famous story with brazen boldness and spiritual/emotional integrity. Visually astounding, emotionally complex and intellectually ambitious, with a stellar cast all around, Aronofsky's film is skillfully crafted to inspire debate, challenge easy interpretation and open new angles of faithful perspective.
YOU MAY ENJOY NOAH IF YOU LIKED:
THE FOUNTAIN (2006)
THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE TWO TOWERS (2002)
THE LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST (1988)
PAN'S LABYRINTH (2006)
Most people know the story of 'Noah's Ark', or at least they know the simplified Sunday School and/or children's storybook adaptation where God floods the Earth, so the prophet Noah built an ark to hold two of every living creature and his family during the storm, and after 40 days and 40 nights of rain had ended, God sent a rainbow. Obviously the story is actually a very dark one, where a world has become so consumed by wickedness that God, He who gives all, wiped the slate clean by killing millions of human beings. Still, the storybook illustration of a white-whiskered Noah and his happy family on the ark (with a pair of giraffe heads poking out of the roof) looking at a rainbow persists.
NOAH is probably the least straightforward major film adaptation of a Bible story than we've ever seen (I could call it the 'least faithful adaptation', but the silly controversy being fueled by conservative Christians makes that into a poor choice of words). It's not even an 'adaptation' per se, as it is an 'interpretation', an attempt to tackle the themes and implications of the ancient story through a new lens. Purge your mind of the marketing campaign which misrepresents the film almost entirely, but in a saving grace, also holds back so much that even with such well-known source material, it all feels very surprising and fresh. Don't expect a film version of the story from Genesis (or from the Qu'ran, but Islamic fundamentalists appear more upset about the visual depiction of a spiritual figure than anything else, so it seems like a moot point), because you won't find it here.
Generations after Adam and Eve were cast out of the Garden of Eden, the line of Cain has flourished, building vast cities and mining the Earth dry of its resources and spreading wickedness as the wealthy and powerful gorge themselves on red meat while swaths of starving families surround their borders, willing to trade their daughters for a scrap of meat. Noah (Russell Crowe), the last in the line of Adam's other prosperous son, Seth, lives outside from the rest of civilization, with his wife Naameh (Jennifer Connelly, who played Russell Crowe's wife before in A BEAUTIFUL MIND), his sons Shem (Douglas Booth), Ham (Logan Lerman) and Japheth (Leo McHugh Carroll), and his adopted daughter, Ila (Emma Watson). Loathsome of the ways of man, Noah receives a vision of the world washed clean in an apocalyptic deluge that will kill everyone, and Noah is chosen to carry out the task of preserving the building blocks of Creation by building a massive ark that will whether the storm. With the help of fallen angels called "Watchers", Noah follows the will of The Creator, but the line of Cain, led by Tubal-Cain (Ray Winstone), the first metallurgist, has no intention of going quietly.
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Jennifer Connelly as Naameh and Russell Crowe as Noah |
Regardless of the debated historicity of the Genesis narrative, NOAH doesn't take a "historic approach", at least in the way we'd think of it. A lot of the fashions used are similar to what's been used in the past 100 years, but woven out of the rough burlap-type fabrics typical of biblical depictions (in one scene, Tubal-Cain wears a crude welding helmet). Even before the apocalyptic deluge, it's a classic dystopian world.
With the Mad Max-style societies and giant rock monsters, it's pretty visionary a lot of the time, but always there to keep things grounded in relatibility is the stellar cast, led by Russell Crowe, who gives one of his best performances years as a very dark and complicated Noah who, at times, represents the confusing nature of God as in the biblical narrative. As his wife, Jennifer Connelly well-established and very moving as she fights for mercy against Noah's harsh justice, and Emma Watson continues to mature into deeper and more challenging roles that stand in contrast to her previous high school characters. Ray Winstone sometimes seems like a bit of a stock villain, but his character is less of an independent and more of a spokesperson for the 'group character' of the wicked people. As Noah's grandfather Methuselah, held in tradition as the oldest man who ever lived, Anthony Hopkins provides a warm and whimsical presence to the dark proceedings, offering lines of sage wisdom and taking joy in the simple things.
For most people getting on board with NOAH will take some time. It has to gestate and sink in. It begs to be talked about and debated, compared and contrasted, and it refuses to play things easily. Even if Hollywood's upcoming trend of spiritual and Bible-based films is sustainable, NOAH is destined to stand apart, and it should be embraced for that. If you want the story from the Bible, then read the Bible. If you want a challenging, interesting and thrilling exploration of the story's characters and themes, then watch NOAH.
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Foreground: Logan Lerman as Ham and Russell Crowe as Noah. Background: The ark (under construction). |