The Book of Eli
Review - Matt Mungle
"Denzel dELIvers"
When Albert Hughes (director) was
asked why he and his brother Allen decided to make the Bible a main focal point
of their new film THE BOOK OF ELI he summed it up by saying, "It had to be the Bible. It is the biggest
selling book of all time. And possibly in the last 2,500 years the biggest
influence on western literature and; it's the Bible, man!" It is this sort
of fascination with the book that leads the two main characters to want to
possess the last known copy in existence in this post-apocalyptic action drama
that mixes faith and butt-kicking like no other film before it.
Eli (Denzel Washington) has spent
the last thirty years traveling west with a book that God not only led him to
but instructed him to protect and deliver in a Moses like journey. Along the way
he has had to survive against bands of cannibalistic marauders and barter for
necessities like water and food. As Eli tells one young girl, "People kill each other now for things we
used to throw away." When Carnegie (Gary Oldman) discovers that Eli has this
book he will stop at nothing to obtain it.
Oldman puts it this way, "Like an
alcoholic who puts the drink first and everything else behind it; in his search
for this book, he puts everything and everyone else behind it. He would kill to
get it." Carnegie wants to use it as a way to control and manipulate the
town he runs. It is up to Eli to protect it and trust God to protect him as he
does so.
Washington delivers nicely in this role. He
has not only the inner strength to be convincing in the mission but also an
outward peace that allows him to be compassionate and wise. As his counterpoint, Oldman also makes one
hellacious bad guy. He is calm in his cunning which makes him more dangerous.
Denzel wanted this to be so and stated, "The good guy is only as good as the bad guy
is bad." It is this face off of characters that gives THE BOOK OF ELI its
meat. Another strong element is a very young and naÔve character named Solara
(Mila Kunis) who was born after the events that destroyed the world. She sees
Eli as a man of compassion who has a faith rarely seen anymore. And it draws her
to him. They compliment each other and she becomes the one that basically helps
Eli discover the truth of his journey.
THE BOOK OF ELI is rated R for
some brutal violence and language. Eli is quite handy with a sword and is quick
to remove body parts of anyone who stands in his way. Also the language is
strong and frequent so parents need to take that into account when toting along
youngsters. I give the film 3.75 out of 5 ray-bans. A few too many plot holes and ambiguous back
stories keep this from being stellar but the concept, action and acting
certainly make it one to see for fans for the kick butt genre. Rarely do you see
the Bible used in such an interesting and conceptual way which makes it stand
out even more. So says Matt Mungle |