Noah (DVD REVIEW)
Noah
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Russell Crowe Adaptation of Biblical Parable Arrives on
DVD
Anybody with even
a rudimentary knowledge of the Bible is undoubtedly familiar with the story of Noah
and the Ark.
That scriptural passage, found in Genesis, revolves around a righteous
patriarch recruited by God to build a big boat before the arrival of a flood being
meted out as divine punishment for man’s many wicked ways.
Heeding the word
of the Lord, he proceeded to construct the mammoth vessel before herding two of
each species of animal into the hold. It subsequently rained for 40 days and 40
nights, with water covering the entire Earth’s surface, thereby drowning all of
humanity except for his family.
So, until now,
the tale of Noah was basically a simple one about God’s decision to completely wipe
the planet of sinners and start over. Leave it to Oscar-nominated director
Darren Aronofsky (for Black Swan) to come up with a novel and intriguing reinterpretation
of the popular parable recasting Noah as a complicated soul wrestling with inner
demons during his quest to do the Lord’s bidding ahead of the impending deluge. The movie also has an ecological angle, plus
some computer-generated monsters ostensibly designed to holds the kids’
interest.
The film stars Academy
Award-winner Russell Crowe (for Gladiator) in the title role, and features a
talented supporting cast which includes fellow Oscar-winners Jennifer Connelly
(for A Beautiful Mind) and Anthony Hopkins (for The Silence of the Lambs),
three-time nominee Nick Nolte (for Warrior, Affliction and The Prince of
Tides), as well as Emma Watson and Ray Winstone.
The picture opens
with what is essentially a Sunday school lesson, a refresher course about the
creation of Adam (Adam Griffith) and Eve (Ariane Rinehart) who begat three
sons: Cain, Abel and Seth. The evil one, Cain, slew his sibling Abel, and those
descending from Cain’s demon seed continued to do the devil’s work by generally
exploiting the planet’s natural resources.
Noah, by contrast,
as a son of Seth, learned how to live in harmony with nature. He and his wife
(Connelly) raised their sons, Shem (Douglas Booth), Japheth (Leo McHugh
Carroll) and Ham (Logan Lerman), with the same eco-friendly philosophy.
Eventually, of
course, Noah gets his marching orders from God, and the plot thickens when the steady
drizzle develops into a neverending downpour. Suddenly, his nosy neighbors no
longer see constructing an ark as such a nutty idea anymore, and it’s going to
take a miracle like an army of animatronic angels to keep the desperate hordes
from climbing aboard.
Meanwhile, a
visibly-anguished Noah agonizes over what’s about to transpire, and consults his
sage, berry-imbibing grandfather, Methuselah (Hopkins). But anticipatory
survivor’s guilt ain’t about to alter God’s plan one iota.
An alternately introspective and breathtaking
Biblical epic, every bit cerebral as it is panoramic!
Excellent (4 stars)
Rated
PG-13 for violence, suggestive content and disturbing
images
Running
time: 138 minutes
Distributor:
Paramount Home Entertainment
Blu-ray
Extras: Iceland:
Extreme Beauty; The Ark Exterior: A Battle for 300 Cubits; and The Ark
Interior: Animals Two by Two.
To
see a trailer for Noah, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAfJulXFYlc
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