Keeping
The Faith Movie Review:
Keeping
the Faith is a jolly and fun romantic comedy. Brian Kilkenny
Finn (Norton) is a Catholic priest who combines his sermons
with one-liners and speaks Spanish in the confession box.
Jake Schram (Stiller), who is Brian's best friend, is a
rabbi who speaks to his congregation with many funny examples.
Anna Riley is a successful businesswoman who has a working
relationship with her cell phone. When Anna, last seen by
Jake and Brian when they were teenagers, returns to New
York as a grown woman, to reunite with her old friends.
Anna reenters Jake and Brian's lives and hearts with a vengeance.
Sparks fly and an unusual and complicated love triangle
creates between the three characters.
Norton
does a potent job in his directorial debut of Keeping the
Faith. Norton did show that he has a vast knowledge of the
aspects behind the camera with his terrific editing job
of American History X. Norton does an excellent job of balancing
the emotion and comedy in Keeping the Faith. I hope to see
Edward Norton doing more directing in the future. He has
the potential to be successful in front of and behind the
camera.
Stuart
Blumberg wrote the script. The plot is something that all
audiences have seen before, which is two best friends falling
in love with the same woman. The background of having the
two lead characters as a priest and a rabbi is what makes
the story unique. It works very well having the two different
religions tie into many comedic situations in the film.
Examples are of Jake and Brian's initiation to the religion,
and the styles that the two friends use to hold the attention
of their congregation. The character development in Keeping
the Faith is a lot better than most of the recent romantic
comedies that have seen (Ex. The Next Best Thing). There
are a couple of vague sequences in the film. An example
is when Jake meets a lot of people from his congregation
at a movie theater.
Edward
Norton continues to show his incredible range as an actor
in Keeping the Faith. Norton is a flat out amazing. He has
gone from playing a psychopathic choirboy in Primal Fear,
to Larry Flynt's lawyer in The People vs. Larry Flynt, to
a hot tempered Nazi skinhead in American History X, to a
lonely insomniac in Fight Club, to a likeable Catholic priest
in Keeping the Faith. It doesn't get much better of a variety
for an actor. Norton always has a deep presence in his roles.
He is Hollywood's next great character actor. Ben Stiller
is an actor that I sometimes enjoy and sometimes find annoying.
However, Stiller turns in his best on-screen performance
as Jake in Keeping the Faith. Stiller isn’t just humorous
in this film, like most of his other roles; he develops
believable drama in his character. Jenna Elfman is a gem
as Anna. Elfman has a great smile that might become recognizable
to audiences in the future. Elfman has progressed quickly
from her TV show Dharma and Greg to becoming an admirable
actress on the silver screen.
Keeping
the Faith is an amusement of a film that also has a message
of self-discovery in it. The film has good direction, good
acting and good writing. The end result is a good movie.
Report
Card Grade: B
Joseph
Tucker
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