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BRUCE ALMIGHTY
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Not everyone can be given good responses for their prayers, sometimes people just have to experience life before they're granted some good luck, it happens for a reason. "Bruce Almighty" sets the way for some truly philosophical questions about god and life and blessings and the message is learned loud and clear. Morgan Freeman does his best with his piddle-some role as god and comes off as sophisticated, witty and subtle. He's the level-head of the story while instilling some sense of wit and texture to the story helping Bruce to realize in the end that people can't always depend on higher forces for good luck, sometimes they have to make their own luck and be their own miracle. And did I mention the delicious Catherine Bell has a small but excellent role here? I'm praying that we meet someday.
While his girlfriend Grace, a very kind-hearted woman, insists things could have been worse he's finally had enough and screams at god that he's had enough of his bad luck. Soon he begins getting pages from a mysterious caller and when he calls is given instructions from an automated machine beckoning his call to an address. When he arrives he stumbles upon a man who says he's god but looks an awful lot like Morgan Freeman. God manages to convince Bruce that he is in fact the almighty one and tells Bruce he's sick and tired of his complaining and is bestowing upon him his powers to see if he thinks the job is so easy. So Bruce is now given god's powers and begins performing tasks for his own benefit never realizing that his tasks are affecting other people and now realizes he must help others outside his own world stop thinking about himself when the world begins becoming chaotic under the results of his decision making. You know, the screenwriter's for this film didn't do a good job of convincing the audience the character Bruce has it all that bad, but then again, that was probably their intention. The character Bruce is not a likable character; he's self-centered, self-absorbed, whiny, and obnoxious at times and he has a hard time appreciating the good things he has, so god decides to give him a taste of his own medicine by giving him his powers. Jim Carrey makes a return to physical comedy after doing the pretty charming drama "The Majestic", which a lot of people disliked, but I appreciated its intentions, and his return is less than graceful. While "Bruce Almighty" makes room for some interesting commentary and messages to the audience about life, and god, and about appreciating what you have, it tries really hard to be laugh out loud funny, but is basically a very bland entry into Carrey's repertoire. The main reason for "Bruce Almighty"'s bland humor is the awful script which consists mostly of Carrey delivering terrible one-liners and forced dialogue almost as if the writer's desperately set out to create some memorable catch-phrases for Carrey but fail rather badly, hell even Carrey doesn't look like he's committing to the one-liners. The situations with his god-like powers can make way for some rather humorous and funny situations but many of the tasks he commits as god are unintentionally pretty creepy like when he sets it up for a K-9 to stumble upon Jimmy Hoffa's body in a field which leads to his comeback scoop, and when Bruce makes a monkey come out of a gangster's butt, one of the more creepy scenes in the film, all the while, there are no redeeming qualities for Bruce who seems utterly self-involved until the end with his chaotic decisions as the stand-in god. Ultimately while the film does convey some interesting theories it's unfunny and often very bland committing to obvious gags like walking on water, and parting a bowl of tomato soup. It fails to really use Carrey's comedic ability and it ultimately wastes the potential it reaps.
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