The Genius Club Movie Review
The Genius Club Review
"The Genius Club" Overview

Rating: PG
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Timothy A. CheyProducer : Arch Bonnema,Daishi Takiishi
Screenwiter : Timothy A. Chey
Starring : Stephen Baldwin,Tom Sizemore,Jack Scalia,Matt Medrano,Carol Abney,Jacob Bonnema,Tricia Helfner,Phillip Moon,Paula Jai Parker,Huntley Ritter
A movie about the world's greatest minds should include -- at the very least --
a modicum of intellectual discourse. What a disappointment then to get a bunch
of dopes spitting out earnest soap-opera dialogue. That's The Genius Club, a
low-budget wannabe thriller that's anything but smart.
In fact, writer-director Timothy Chey's failed feature sets up one implausible
scenario after another, on top of uniformly unremarkable acting. What's left to
the story then? An ambitious concept that's flat from the first clichéd line of
narration.
It seems a madman (Tom Sizemore, playing to type) is holding Washington, D.C.
hostage with a nuclear weapon he's ready to detonate. But if a small group of
the country's highest IQs can correctly answer high-minded questions posed by
Crazy Guy, he'll call it off and spare half a million lives. So Homeland
Security -- which appears to be three serious-looking college guys -- rounds up
the smarties and hustles them to an empty warehouse in D.C. to play the game.
We've been duped. Instead of actually using their 220 IQs to answer humanity's
toughest questions, the group just whines and bitches about various subjects,
receiving "points" from the bad guy whenever he agrees with them or appreciates
their hard honesty. It's like a ridiculous combination of Speed, ESPN's "Around
the Horn," and a game of Truth or Dare. (In case you're wondering by now: No,
this is not a comedy.)
The production itself is bargain basement. I don't mean low-budget and
resourceful, I mean cheap. Too often times, poor audio design makes the game's
participants sound distant. And a flashback scene in a hospital is so obviously
shot in a spare office of some kind it's tough to take seriously.
As for the so-called game, it plays out with arguments you'd hear in Philosophy
101 classrooms. One could assume that, in order to write dialogue spoken by
brilliant experts, it would help to talk to one while writing the script. Such
research seems lacking, as does general fact-checking: In a TV news report that
appears early in the film, a reporter calls a potential nuclear attack
"eminent." Um, I think the word you're looking for is "imminent."
All this trouble is made worse by a weak cast that sound like they just got
their SAG cards (exceptions being Sizemore and Stephen Baldwin). Things are at
their silliest when the President – played by B-actor Jack Scalia – gives a pep
talk to a pro ball player in the group, staring eye-to-eye and uttering
baseball-isms that sound like Zucker-style satire. "Now you get out there and
hit it out of the park... Yes sir, Mr. President!" With this much cheese, I was
looking for crackers.
And reality. The dialogue between Secret Service and the President seems, well,
made up, with no sign of authenticity. When we meet the aforementioned baseball
player, he's actually carrying a baseball with him. Huh!? And the country's
biggest brains, faced with having to solve the world's problems, offer no
information I didn't already know. And trust me, I certainly don't have a 220
IQ.
Through all the core flaws and eventual tedium, Chey's thinking is admirable,
that we must be firm in our own self-awareness and knowledge to understand the
world around us. There's a sense of Judeo-Christian ethic wrapped around it,
which may help explain the participation of born-again Baldwin. (In fact,
producer Arch Bonnema was part of an exploration team that believes they may
have found proof of Noah's Ark.) Regardless, without a strong execution, such
concepts are idealistic, not interesting.
I am so smart! I am so smart! S-M-R-T! I mean S-M-A-R-T!
Reviewer: Norm Schrager





