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Noahs
Ark latest subject in disaster genre
Television
mini-series just may be the first
post-modern biblical epic.

Noahs Ark, starring Jon Voight, Mary Steenburgen
and F. Murray Abraham, is directed by John Irvin. Not
rated. May 2-3 on NBC.
By
Peter T. Chattaway
ChristianWeek film critic
Just about every kind of disaster film
has appeared on screens big and small in the past few
years, so it was only a matter of time before some
producer turned to the Bible for inspiration. The result
is Noahs Ark, a two-part mini-series
produced by Robert Halmi Sr., the renowned showman who
has made it his mission to bring literary classics such
as Gullivers Travels, The Odyssey and
Moby Dick to TV sets everywhere.
Floods, volcanoes, meteors, tornadoes,
shipwrecksNoahs Ark has it all. The
film also begins with a glaring anachronism. In Genesis,
the towns of Sodom and Gomorrah are not destroyed until
hundreds of years after Noahs lifetime. But in
Halmis version, scripted by Peter Barnes, Noah (Jon
Voight) is a native Sodomite, albeit a righteous one, who
flees the town shortly before its destruction; his best
friend Lot (F. Murray Abraham) also escapes, even though
he is decidedly not righteous.
Years pass, and Noahs sons grow
into handsome young menall of whom are despised by
the local villagers because, while the town suffers from
a drought, Noah and his family seem to live in divinely
ordained prosperity on a nearby farm. (It doesnt
help that Noahs sons interrupt a virgin-sacrificing
ritual with the help of some heavenly pyrotechnics.)
Then God tells Noah and his family to
build an ark, and so they do. The second part of the film
concerns the flood itself, and its almost entirely
fictitious. Lot returns as the captain of a pirate ship,
sporting an eye-patch and a full complement of grappling
hooks. James Coburn has a brief cameo as a salesman in a
primitive paddlewheeler who mourns the passing of
monetary systems and sells Noah some liquor (for which
there is at least some sort of biblical
precedent).
Mad with boredom
Eventually, in the films most
bizarre sequence, the arks residents begin to go
mad with boredom. Whats more, Noah decrees that
there is to be no procreation aboard the ark, and hence
no sex. Tensions mount. People hallucinate. And then God
tells Noah that hes reconsidered his plans and,
well, all humanity is going to have to die after all.
Noah, faced with imminent death, responds the only way he
knows howby whistling and dancing. God, amused,
decides to keep humans around a while longer.
No, this certainly isnt the story
we heard in Sunday school. Some of the films
innovations are rather cute, as when Shem (Mark Bazeley)
turns out to be allergic to one of the animals. But the
filmmakers, including director John Irvin, refuse to
sober up even when the material demands more serious
treatment. The dialogue is hopelessly
modern"Up the creek without a rudder,"
sighs Japheth (Jonathan Cake) when he learns that the ark
has been travelling in circlesand the film often
seems to wink at its audience, as if to say,
"Isnt this silly?"
Indeed, this just may be the first
post-modern biblical epic: shortly after their escape
from Sodom, Noah tells his wife Naamah (Mary Steenburgen)
that they should get a scribe to write their story down.
Naamah balks at the idea. "Scribbling scribes have a
very bad reputation," she says. "They change
things. By the time theyve finished the story of
Sodom and Gomorrah, theyll probably say we
werent even there."
This is not to say that Noahs
Ark never takes itself seriously; it does have a few
points to make, mostly concerning the need to protect the
environment. But these points are couched in a narrative
that is often too glib for its own good.
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