You’d be forgiven for assuming Big Miracle, the new film from Ken Kwapis (He’s Just Not That Into You, The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants), to be a made-for-TV movie. Its feel-good fervor and human-interest subject matter – the true tale of three whales trapped beneath the ice off the coast of Alaska in 1988 and the rescue efforts mounted on their behalf – certainly merit the Hallmark seal of approval, and its ensemble cast is littered with small-screen stars. But it opens this week not on the Discovery Channel or Lifetime but theaters – a few thousand of them, in fact. Perhaps that’s the “miracle” of which the title speaks.
John Krasinski, taking care not to stray too far from his Office
persona, stars as Adam Carlson, a Barrow, Alaska, TV newsman dreaming of
the big time when a local boy (Ahmaogak Sweeney) arrives with a story
that just might get him there: On the eve of their annual migration, a
trio of grey whales have become marooned under the Arctic Circle’s
fast-forming ice sheet. Incapable of making the four-mile trek to open
seas without running out of air, they cling to a shrinking hole in the
ice, their only source of oxygen, as time slowly runs out.
No sooner has Adam filed his first report than Barrow is inundated
with reporters, turning the plight of the whales into a media cause
célèbre. A broad-based coalition is formed to free Fred, Wilma, and
Bamm-Bamm, as they come to be nicknamed, bringing together such strange
bedfellows as a headstrong environmental activist (Drew Barrymore), a
scheming oil magnate (Ted Danson), a White House political operative
(Vinessa Shaw), a native Alaskan tribe, and the Soviet navy.
Big Miracle is conceived an inspirational family film, and as such
there are the usual array of heart-tugging scenes, but there’s also an
odd strain of cynicism that permeates it. Hardly a soul in the film,
save perhaps for Barrymore’s character, embraces the whales’ cause with
what might be deemed altruistic intentions. Krasinski’s anchor eyes the
crisis as an opportunity to advance his career, as does a rival
reporter, played by Kristen Bell, who arrives on the scene shortly
thereafter. Danson’s oilman is seeking a public-relations boost, while
Shaw’s politico hopes to burnish the eco-friendly credentials of George
H.W. Bush in advance of his presidential run. Even Krasinski’s Eskimo
sidekick makes a killing hawking souvenirs and accessories to visiting
rubes. The whole thing ends up feeling like some kind of saccharine
paean to the virtues of self-interest, a Hallmark special scripted by
Ayn Rand.
Big Miracle never quite rises to the level of tear-jerker, despite
the best efforts of Barrymore, who all but channels the whales’
suffering with her histrionics. Part of the problem, frankly, is that
grey whales aren’t the most photogenic of species. (There’s a reason why
their oceanic rivals, the dolphins, get the bulk of the plum movie
jobs.) At any rate, their majesty is scarcely apparent when confined to a
hole in the ice, depriving Big Miracle of those endearing “Awwwww…”
moments so crucial to the success of animals-in-peril films.
Still, it’s hard not to feel bad for the poor creatures, unsightly as
they may be, as their plight is gradually overshadowed in Big Miracle
by the contrived human drama that ensues on their periphery. (They are,
in many ways, surrogates for the audience.) In the end, when the whales
finally escape their icy prison and take leave of their human “helpers,”
one longs to escape with them.
Release Date : 02/03/2012
Rating : 2.5/5
Courtesy : Hollywood
Runtime : Not Yet Available
Genre : Comedy drama, Romance, Adventure
Director : Ken Kwapis
Cast : John Krasinski, Drew Barrymore, Dermot Mulroney, Tim Blake Nelson
Rating : 2.5/5
Courtesy : Hollywood
Runtime : Not Yet Available
Genre : Comedy drama, Romance, Adventure
Director : Ken Kwapis
Cast : John Krasinski, Drew Barrymore, Dermot Mulroney, Tim Blake Nelson
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