I find within film criticism there are two camps of people, those who like easily, and those who hate easily. Those that like (and I would include myself in this category) look for the good in films, try to see past any initial faults and generally go into a film wanting to like it, wanting to be impressed. Those who easily hate on the other hand go into films wanted to dislike them, they easily pick up on the bad and can be very hard to please. Those people will not like this film. At all. Yet for me it is hard to hate this, like all of Tom Shadyac’s films (Liar Liar, Bruce Almighty, Patch Adams) it wears its heart on it’s sleeve, it can be really overly cheesy and sappy and relies heavily on family friendly broad slapstick, but it has a good moral message and so to hate it seems like kicking a puppy – unnecessarily mean and with no real purpose.
A sort of sequel to Bruce Almighty, Evan sees former anchorman Evan Baxter (Steve Carell) moving to Washington with his family having recently been elected as a local Congressman. To be fair the film tries to tie this story in to the original film but Carell’s character bears little resemblance to the rather mean reporter he played before, it is clear with his newly found fame the makers chose to elaborate on the original rather than develop an entirely new character which may have worked better, but the discrepancy is minor and doesn’t significantly affect the film.
As in Bruce Almighty Even may be a success at work but he has bigger problems with his family that he if unaware of, until God appears to him and charges him with making an Ark in the neighbouring housing lots, and saving himself in the process. At first Evan protests but as eventually becomes convinced as he becomes the laughing stock of the neighbourhood and his antics begin to threaten his home life as well. These early sections of the film are fairly amusing, as Carrel’s quest for a quiet life come a cropper as tonnes of wood is dumped on his lawn and pairs of animals begin to follow him around In fact the whole film could be summed up thusly, fairly amusing. It was watchable and Carrels natural charm lends a lot of likeability to the character, especially when people turn against him, the message about perseverance and trusting in God is well handled without being overly preachy. What’s a shame is that virtually no-one else is developed at all, Carell’s family are bland and left with little material other than for minor family drama, Morgan Freeman sleepwalks through his role as God once again, but still outperforms most people and Evan’s work colleagues tend to annoy more than entertain (Wanda Sykes take a bow) whilst John Goodman hams it up as an evil senator.
Still the film boasts some impressive special effects at the end and a timely, if overly simplified message about the environment and religion and some good jokes as well that seem broadly placed to as wider audience as possible (though the mere thought of the combination of cute animals + children + religion has probably already put those of a certain disposition into some kind of hate fuelled coma.) I guess that’s one of the problems with the film, how safe it plays it, everything in the film is black or white, problems get solved, people are made ok again and everything works out for the best. It is a very simplified version of reality that will no doubt infuriate some, and yet it is done with genuine feeling, something rare in mainstream movies these days, which somehow makes it work, there’s nothing shameless about a positive message if you mean it, and you get the feeling that Shadyac really does, whether you agree with him or not.
And yet with all these reasons not the like the film, I kind of did. This is the kind of film I can imagine watching in the future with my family and children, and so to hate on it for the kind of film it is seems rather moot. As much as there is a place for serious emotional drama, and violent horror there is a place for films with a message, films that put a smile on your face and make you feel good about humanity for a while. Evan Almighty is not a masterpiece; neither is it a particularly great film in itself, but it has enough winning charm and sincerity to work despite this.
Predictable and obviously targeted as wide as possible Evan should have been a disaster but through Carell’s charms and a solid message (and some impressive effects) this manages to just stay the right side of overblown sappiness and provide an entertaining enough feel good film that will definitely not be to everyone’s tastes.







Back in 1997 Nintendo released the Nintendo 64 games console, off the back of the massive success they had with the SNES. However this was the generation that Sony would enter the console race releasing their Playstation console a year and a half previously. Whilst the N64 was more powerful it struggled with its choice of cartridges over CDs and to match Sony new and fresh take on the industry. However it was the release of Mario 64 with the console that brought it worldwide attention, simultaneously re-inventing the platform game and exemplifying the potential within 3D worlds the game was a landmark title and one that proved to be my real introduction to console video gaming. Whilst my family had owned an Amiga back in the day the first console me and my brother ever got was the N64 for the Christmas of 1997, almost 10 years ago. Until the point I had no particular bias to choose Nintendo over Sony, the only reason I can think of choosing it was that the games appealed to me more, and I distinctly remember playing a demo of Mario in a local shop and deciding that was the game I wanted to play.
So Christmas rolled around the N64 and Mario was turned on and I was hooked. It’s easy now to look back and forget what was so revolutionary about Mario 64 at the time, it was the first game to really take advantage of the concept of 3D worlds but retained the tight platforming and level design that made the older Mario games such classics. What remains amazing about the game today is how much it accomplishes that had never been done before. The game is huge with 15 distinct worlds each with their own challenges, enemies and secrets. Add to this the castle which was the perfect ‘hub’ world and showcase for the graphics and controls. Rather than walk you through a 20 minute tutorial on how to the play the game Mario 64 brilliantly lets you work it out for yourself at the start as you simply explore the landscape. It is an inspired idea and something that, even now, few games tend to implement successfully.
What makes Mario stick in my mind so much is that it is one of the few games I continue to go back to. There is something wonderfully fun and enjoyable about the game that I find myself itching to play it every now and again, not just play it mind, but complete it. It is just the right side of challenging and the collecting element of the game allows you to decide between completing the game, or continuing to get everything before the big finish. The game is also remarkably solid in design and feel, there are a few glitches but generally the rigorous testing that Nintendo employ is visible in the sheer quality of the game. In a way it is sad to look back nearly ten years on from Mario 64 and see that the platform game has not greatly evolved or changed in that time, in fact platform games are much less common these days with more realistic shooters and racing games prevailing as the dominant genres within gaming. But, largely due to this single game, it will remain a type of game I always have a soft spot for, and as a result of this the reason I still look back at the N64 with such fond memories.
Nowadays platformers seem to be the easy choice for film tie-ins and it seems once again it has taken Nintendo to really play about with the conventions in the upcoming Mario Galaxy which is due for release in November and which may be the first game in all this time to eclipse Mario 64. Of course nothing can really replace the change that Mario 64 represented within the industry or the impact it still holds today. It was the first console game I ever owned, played and completed and remains to this day one of the best. If you have never played it I urge you to check it out either by buying an old copy or downloading it from the Wii’s Virtual Console, like good films and music great games will always remain great despite the primitive graphics and technology and there is no finer example of this than Super Mario 64.