Film & TV

Film Review: Noah

Noah

Directed by Darren Aronofsky, Noah is his most spectacle-driven film to date. Loaded with CGI, it maintains a myriad of religious imagery.

 

NoahCecille B DeMille would find much similarity with Noah. Producer of many biblical epics from the 1950s, his grand vision of holy stories raked in much box office dollars. This divine cash-cow would never fade with Hollywood continually replicating his successful formula. Directed by Darren Aronofsky, Noah is his most spectacle-driven film to date. Loaded with CGI, it maintains its myriad of religious imagery the likes of DeMille would have easily spotted.

Noah (Russell Crowe) is a carpenter suffering from strange dreams. Haunted by images of a cataclysmic flood, he sets out to protect his family. They include his wife Naameh (Jennifer Connelly), adopted daughter Ila (Emma Watson), and son Ham (Logan Lerman). Building an ark which can withstand any catastrophe, Noah refuses to be scared of other’s ridicule as disaster looms.

Noah is a strange concoction of styles. Filled with the expected religious sermonising, it copies much from the Lord of the Rings and Game of Thrones formula. It has sword fights, battle sequences and even supernatural monsters. These seem very out of place for such a famed tale. Had it been filmed in a more believable style Noah would have worked better. The added elements conspire to muddy the often glacially-paced narrative with minimal characterisation.

Crowe and his co-stars gamely attempt to rise above these setbacks. Unfortunately their performances become swamped by the excessive and occasionally badly realised CGI. Aronovsky seems to lose interest with his lacklustre direction drawing little emotion or depth. The amazing cinematography is a plus with its mix of gritty climes and searing beauty going some way in papering over the script’s many cracks.

Those hoping for a truer representation of the Noah’s Ark tale will probably be disappointed. Noah fails to fire with its infrequent signs of life doing little to capture the grandiose atmosphere of DeMille’s fabled works.

Reviewed by Patrick Moore

Rating out of 10: 4

 

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