Creation Movie Review
Creation Review

"Creation" Overview

Rating: PG
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Jon AmielProducer : Jeremy Thomas
Screenwiter : John Collee
Starring : Paul Bettany,Jennifer Connelly,Jeremy Northam,Benedict Cumberbatch,Toby Jones,Jim Carter,Martha West,Bill Patterson
In tackling the story of what's been called "the biggest single idea in the
history of thought", the filmmakers offer a fresh angle on a controversial
topic. And it's an imaginative, human approach that brings it vividly to life.
In the mid-1800s, Charles Darwin (Bettany) faces a huge crisis: struggling
after the death of 10-year-old daughter Annie (West), he's at odds with his
wife Emma (Connelly) and his own Christian beliefs due to the results of his
study of variations in species over time. Paralysed by what this will do to his
marriage and his faith, he locks his research into a box. But swirling memories
of Annie, encouragement from his friends (Cumberbatch and Jones), physical
illness and marital strain force him to confront something he can no longer
deny.
Based on Annie's Box, Randal Keynes biography of his great-great-grandfather,
the film keeps the story intensely personal, focussing on Darwin's internal
quandary. Collee's script cleverly weaves together events over two decades,
mainly in the years before On the Origin of Species was published in 1859, but
also including glimpses of Darwin's earlier experiences on the Beagle
expedition, which gave him the spark of an idea for his theory.
It's a delicate balancing job that really pays off dramatically, focussing
tightly on the characters as they deal with the growing storm of potential
controversy around them. In this sense, it's a remarkably strong examination of
a resilient marriage, and it's beautifully played by both Bettany and Connelly,
who channel their real-life relationship into something both playful and darkly
shaded on-screen. Opposite them, the excellent supporting cast seems almost
simplistic, from Northam's narrow-minded minister to Jones' strident
rabble-rouser.
Amid this, Amiel deepens the story with telling flashbacks, dreams, time-lapse
sequences and beautifully re-enacted bedtime stories. And the unfussy design
realistically captures the period without distracting us from the central
drama. All of this flows together with a remarkable fluidity, capturing the
idea that there must be balance in everything--nature, marriage and especially
between science and religion. In the end, it's the emotions that linger with
us, as the film makes a powerful point that telling and accepting the honest
truth is often wrenchingly hard to do.
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Review by Rich Cline
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