As I sat in the darkened theater and watched the film unfold before me, I could not help but feel as if I was watching a play rather than a movie. Now, I recognized lines from the Bible, and parts that I remember from my own readings, but something that the Bible is full of, is dialogue that does not sound real. This may be due to the variety of translations, or perhaps because that the way we speak has changed so much over the past 2000 years. I would not have had a problem if the words were written in more easy fashion. That may compromise the integrity of remaining faithful to the story, but it may have made the experience a bit more enjoyable.
The Nativity Story is the story of the first Christmas (a day which was most likely not December 25th). It tells of Mary and the appearance of the Angel Gabriel announcing to her that she has been chosen to be the Mother of the Messiah. As any young girl would be, Mary was scared, but she had faith in what the plan was for her. The story follows as she is set to be married to Joseph, a young carpenter. Before the marriage is set to occur, she visits her older sister, Elizabeth, who was thought too old to bear children, yet was pregnant with John the Baptist. This is followed by the journey of Joseph and the very pregnant Mary to Bethlehem for the census. The journey concludes with the arrival of Jesus, born in a stable, the only room available to them, and the arrival of the shepherds and the three wise men to worship the newly born King.
The three primary threads are weaved together rather sloppily. The transitions seemed to be abrupt and I cannot say I truly got a feel for Herod and his son and their problems, nor did I get the relationship of the wise men. The jumps seemed to be odd and lacked in flow, it kind of took me out of the moments.
The acting was mediocre. Keisha Castle-Hughes stars as Mary, she was excellent when I saw her last in Whale Rider, here she actually seems to be well suited to the role, despite my not feeling the true weight of her journey. Shoreh Agdashloo, as much as I like her in some other roles, seems out of place here as Elizabeth. Her voice does not seem quite right, and she strikes me as being a bit too old for the role. Ciarin Hinds is all right as King Herod, although he doesn't really do all that much. I would have to say I felt most for Oscar Isaac's Joseph, he emoted the best, I felt more of what he was feeling than anyone else in the film.
The story itself is a wonderful one, and one that was done well here, just not great. It is slowly paced, and may threaten young ones with sleep, but is a suitable film for families, and may be a good one to see during this season, if for nothing else than to recenter what the Christmas season is about.
Bottomline. Supported by some very nice music, The Nativity Story delivers a film that is easily palatable if nothing special in the end. There could be a better film buried in here, but what we have is a mediocre movie about a momentous event. Could have been worse. I enjoyed it too an extent, more for the spirit in which it was made, rather than the execution.
Mildly Recommended.
No comments:
Post a Comment