Bruce Almighty
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| Bruce Almighty | |
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Bruce Almighty film poster |
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| Directed by | Tom Shadyac |
| Produced by | Gary Barber Roger Birnbaum |
| Written by | Steve Koren (story/script) Mark O'Keefe (story/script) Steve Oedekerk (script) |
| Starring | Jim Carrey Morgan Freeman Jennifer Aniston Philip Baker Hall |
| Music by | John Debney |
| Distributed by | Universal Studios (USA) Buena Vista International (non-USA) |
| Release date(s) | May 23, 2003 |
| Running time | 101 min. |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $80 million |
| Followed by | Evan Almighty (2007) |
| IMDb profile | |
Bruce Almighty (2003) is a comedy movie directed by Tom Shadyac and written by Steve Koren, Mark O'Keefe and Steve Oedekerk. It stars Jim Carrey, Morgan Freeman and Jennifer Aniston. Steve Carell, Catherine Bell, Lisa Ann Walter, and Philip Baker Hall co-star. Tony Bennett and "Juan Valdez" make cameo appearances. This is the third film collaboration between Jim Carrey and Tom Shadyac, the first two being Ace Ventura: Pet Detective and Liar, Liar.
When the film was released in American theaters in late May 2003, it took the #1 spot at the box office, raking in $85.7 million, higher than the release of Pearl Harbor, making it the highest-rated Memorial Day weekend opening of any film in motion picture history until the release of X-Men: The Last Stand over Memorial Day 2006. [1] By the time it left theaters in December 2003, it took in a United States domestic total of over $242 million and over $562 million worldwide, breaking records as the highest-grossing live action comedy ever.[2]
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Bruce Nolan (Jim Carrey) is a TV news reporter at Eyewitness News Channel 7 in Buffalo, New York (WKBW-TV) who fails to get a job as an anchorman and, after a series of other bad luck incidents, complains to God that he is treating him unfairly and is doing a poor job as supreme deity. Bruce is then contacted by God (Morgan Freeman) and endowed with almighty powers to prove that he can do a better job. Bruce quickly abuses his new-found powers for personal gain, only to be reminded that he also has to take care of other people's problems. Meanwhile, Bruce endangers his relationship with girlfriend Grace Connelly (Jennifer Aniston) through his self-centered behavior. In the end, Bruce realizes that God's powers are best left for God to handle and graciously asks for God to take control of his life.
The movie portrays God as a wise, but smart-alec elderly man. God quotes a line from one of Carrey's other movies ("Alrighty then", from Ace Ventura), and tells Bruce that if he wants, Bruce can fix all the world's problems in a few minutes, knowing full well from millennia of experience that he cannot. God is also cast in a sort of sympathetic light. Bruce receives hundreds of millions of prayers, all from, according to God, his single town. Having to listen to the prayers of the whole world, one can only imagine how God feels. Bruce is thus able to realize just how much work God must do to keep creation "in line." As Bruce and God themselves put it in two scenes, where Bruce wants the person he loves to love him:
- Bruce: How do you make somebody love you without affecting their free will?
- God: Welcome to my world.
And a second scene over prayers
- God: You made a mess of things, huh?
- Bruce: I just gave them what they wanted. [Bruce had answered YES to all his prayers]
- God: Yeah, but since when does anyone have a clue what they want?
At the end of the movie, God causes Bruce to get hit by a truck so they can talk in Heaven. After Bruce asks for Grace to find a man to make her truly happy, God brings Bruce back to life and has Grace return to him at the hospital. In the end, Bruce has changed his outlook on life - he is happy with the meager stories he covers, gives blood to help others, and marries Grace.
- The film was shot in the same locations as the Back to the Future films, as seen in the sequence of the town going crazy (although the familiar clock tower clock has been covered). Also, the scene with Grace jogging was shot on the same street as the one in Back to the Future where Marty McFly followed his 1955 father to Lorraine's house.
- The day care center where Grace works is set in the same school that was used in Liar Liar, one of Carrey's other films, which was also released by Universal.
- Jim Carrey owns the Saleen S7 supercar that he drove in the movie.
- In Bruce's "Mr. Exclusive" billboard, his picture on the billboard was one used for a promo shot for Liar Liar.
- After they finish mopping up the floor, God comments, "Alrighty then." Jim Carrey's Ace Ventura character says the exact same thing.
- Another reference to Ace Ventura is the monkey that comes out of the gangster's backside. It's a capuchin monkey, the same species as Ace Ventura's pet monkey.
- Bruce uses the e-mail service, Yahweh, based on Yahoo!, and a Hebrew name for God, to answer other people's prayer. See the Hebrew tetragrammaton YHWH.
- The film's basic plot concept is similar to that of the H.G. Wells story, The Man Who Could Work Miracles.
- In the movie, it states that the Buffalo Sabres have won the Stanley Cup. In reality, the current champions were the New Jersey Devils. (This of course being the result of probably many of the prayers that Bruce had previously answered "Yes to all" to.)
- The Buffalo Sabres are mentioned in the movie as losing to the Toronto Maple Leafs on the local newschannel that Bruce was watching.
- The movie was banned in Egypt due to pressure from Islamic religious circuits who objected to the portrayal of God as a visually ordinary man.
- There were also rigorous protests from a small, but vocal, faction of the otherwise liberal Muslim population in Malaysia. The government did not outlaw its screening, and Bruce Almighty still appears occasionally, albeit heavily edited, on Malaysian satellite television.
- In Iran, the movie was interpreted in the light of Twelver Shiism—the predominant branch of Islam practiced in the country. The appearance of Morgan Freeman's character at the end echoes the prophesied return of the 12th Imam.[3]
The movie received rather mixed reviews (50% on Rotten Tomatoes and an average of 46 out of a 100 on Metacritic.com), but nonetheless took in nearly $243 million at the box office, making it Jim Carrey's most successful film since 2000's How the Grinch Stole Christmas (also released by Universal).
The film caused controversy because God contacts Bruce using an actual phone number rather than a number in the standard fictional 555 telephone exchange. The original telephone number was 776-2323 [1]. No area code was included. Several people and groups sharing this number have received hundreds of phone calls from people wanting to talk to God. Oddly enough, some of the calls went to a church located in Sanford, North Carolina, whose pastor also shared the same first name as the Jim Carrey's character in the movie.[4]
The producers note that the number chosen was not in use in the Buffalo, New York area where the film is set in, but did not check anywhere else. The DVD and television versions changed the display of the pager to 555-0123.
- Jim Carrey as Bruce Nolan
- Morgan Freeman as God
- Jennifer Aniston as Grace Connelly
- Lisa Ann Walter as Debbie
- Philip Baker Hall as Jack Baylor
- Steve Carell as Evan Baxter
- Catherine Bell as Susan Ortega
- Sally Kirkland as Anita Mann
- Nora Dunn as Ally Loman
- Jack Jozefson as the Homeless Man
- Carlos Sanchez - Juan Valdez as Himself
- Tom Rohr as the male model
- Director: Tom Shadyac
- Writer: Steve Koren
- Writer: Mark O'Keefe
- Writer: Steve Oedekerk
- 01 - One of us - Joan Osborne
- 02 - God-shaped-hole - Plumb
- 03 - You're a God - Vertical Horizon
- 04 - The power - Snap
- 05 - A Little less Conversation - Elvis vs. JXL
- 06 - Rockafeller Skank - Fatboy Slim
- 07 - God gave me Everything - Nick Jagger
- 08 - AB Positive
- 09 - Walking on water
- 10 - Bruce meets God
- 11 - Bruce's Prayer
- 12 - Grace's prayer
- 13 - End Movie
- ^ http://www.boxofficemojo.com/news/?id=1246&p=.htm
- ^ http://216.239.51.104/search?q=cache:D3JDVpLKm4IJ:www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/%3Fid%3Dbrucealmighty.htm+Bruce+Almighty+weekend+opening&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1
- ^ Karl Vick. "Misreading Tehran", Washington Post, June 25, 2006, p. B01. Retrieved on 2006-06-27.
- ^ ‘Bruce Almighty' fans give God a call, May 29, 2003
- Bruce Almighty at the Internet Movie Database
- Bruce Almighty at Rotten Tomatoes
- Bruce Almighty at Box Office Mojo
Categories: Cleanup from December 2006 | All pages needing cleanup | Articles lacking sources from December 2006 | All articles lacking sources | 2003 films | American films | Universal Pictures films | Films distributed by Buena Vista International | San Diego films | English-language films | Fantasy films