Oh that's not fair. Can't I hate this film on its own merits?
Yes, yes you can - and should!!!
Oh that's not fair. Can't I hate this film on its own merits?
Oh that's not fair. Can't I hate this film on its own merits?
Sure you can. But it's not nearly as interesting(to me) as the ridiculous reasons conservative Christians hate it.
Now if only I could get the funding to direct a movie about the Bible.
Sure you can. But it's not nearly as interesting(to me) as the ridiculous reasons conservative Christians hate it.
Now if only I could get the funding to direct a movie about the Bible. I think the Book of Ezekiel is very film-worthy. It's vaguely similar to the flood story, except an angry Yahweh punishes by other means. We're talking about the destruction of Jerusalem here, and just about every nation in the Middle East. I can just see George Clooney looking so sexy as Ezekiel. Lots of CGI for all the horrific destruction. John Williams can write the moving film score.
I would try my best to stick Gollum in there somehow!
I think that's a thumbs-down from Ken Ham:
https://www.facebook.com/aigkenham/posts/592034124220602?stream_ref=10
No, that would actually be psychopathic God, wouldn't it.
I thought I might just make a low-budget version of the Massacre of the Canaanites, with no CGI and with lots of no frills violence in a cinema verite fashion. There'll also be some close-up rape scenes too.
Basically, anybody hoping for Ye Olde Style Biblical Epics or Modern CGI Lord of the Rings-hybrid Epics will be disappointed.
... Now if only I could get the funding to direct a movie about the Bible. ...John Williams can write the moving film score.
So does Noah turn one son into a negro?
I was looking through the reviews on Rotten Tomatoes. Was rated 76% by critics but only 58% by normal viewers. Not normally a good sign, but people seemed to either love it or hate it - so it finally got my curiosity up. At first I thought it might be an atheists vs believers meme, but the like/dislike was more complex.
Just on basic principle of not paying money to people who make religious movies I bought a ticket to a 'Divergent' showing (I've already seen it) that started 10 minutes earlier and then hustled over to see Noah across the hallway. With the theater almost empty I was a little nervous I'd be missed over in Divergent but nobody cared.
Oddly enough, I would give Noah about a 58% also.
There are parts that are excellent and parts that seem to have been added just to gratuitously piss believers off. There are parts that are just plan bad, and parts that are inspired. Noah could be an hour shorter and pretty well tell the Bible version, it is the other hour of creative material that I'm curious who the intended audience is. Believers will hate it and unbelievers will go 'huh'? is that really in the Bible?
In this extra hour we are presented with a rather maniacal lunatic, a would be baby-killer Noah who understands God's message being that humans are only temporary and expendable tools primarily needed to save all the innocent animals that God was REALLY interested in saving. It is only at the very end and with a sense of disappointing failure that Noah assents to what is essentially Plan B - 'ok it's up to me so let's let some people live'.
There is enough outright Biblical nonsense to please atheists and believers alike. Noah needs a Starship, oops I mean ark, to do God's will - so a forest miraculously appears in a barren landscape borrowed from 'The Lorax' just so it can be cut down to make God's ark. The animal loading is done well - you see a vast multitude of animals waiting patiently to be loaded on a comparatively tiny ark - and yet there is room for them all.
It is hard to tell from the darkness of some of the cinematography, but I'm pretty sure a unicorn is killed and eaten as well as some humans.
The movie is almost worth watching just to see Anthony Hopkins as Methuselah. It is a small role but he nails the crazy OT mystical prophet, peppering it with mystical power and an endless search for fresh berries and presumably a pet cat. (His death is actually a Biblical date calculation).
The idea of an industrialist steampunk pre-flood society is inspired but there is not enough of it. The earth giants/fallen angels/Nephilium are not as annoying as reviews portray but an opportunity to add some sorely needed humor was lost. This is a far too serious movie.
So finally, by the end the movie just seemed like a waste of time - it doesn't carry any real 'heft' for either believers or unbelievers.
Does the movie include the love scene between Noah and his daughters?