Bruce Almighty (2003)

Movie · 2003 · Fantasy, Comedy · 1h 41m · PG-13 · English

Curator score: 2.3/10 (974.9K ratings)

If you could be God for one week, what would you do?

Overview

Bruce Nolan toils as a "human interest" television reporter in Buffalo, NY, but despite his high ratings and the love of his beautiful girlfriend, Bruce remains unfulfilled. At the end of the worst day in his life, he angrily ridicules God — and the Almighty responds, endowing Bruce with all of His divine powers.

Ratings

Director

Tom Shadyac

Production

Pit Bull Productions, Spyglass Entertainment, Universal Pictures, Shady Acres Entertainment

Cast

Jim Carrey, Morgan Freeman, Jennifer Aniston, Philip Baker Hall, Catherine Bell, Lisa Ann Walter, Steve Carell, Nora Dunn, Eddie Jemison, Paul Satterfield, Mark Kiely, Sally Kirkland, Tony Bennett, Timothy Di Pri, Brian Tahash, Lou Felder, Lillian Adams, Christopher Darga, Jack Jozefson, Mark Adair-Rios

Curator Review

Verdict

A broad, high-concept Jim Carrey comedy with a strong premise, a few iconic bits, and an easy crowd-pleaser energy, but it is also very much a product of its era: uneven, sentimental, and more hit-or-miss than its reputation suggests. The best material comes from Carrey’s physical comedy and the simple wish-fulfillment setup; the weaker stretches lean on broad jokes and tidy moralizing.

Best for

  • Jim Carrey fans
  • early-2000s studio comedy nostalgia
  • light fantasy-comedy viewers
  • audiences who like big, quotable set pieces

Skip if

  • you want subtle humor
  • you dislike broad slapstick
  • you prefer tighter, more modern comedies
  • you are allergic to sentimental life-lessons

Overview

Bruce Almighty is built around a premise that is almost impossible not to understand instantly: what if an ordinary, frustrated man got to play God for a week? That simplicity gives the movie a lot of comic fuel, and Jim Carrey throws himself into it with the kind of elastic, full-body performance that made him a star. The film’s most memorable scenes are still the ones where his physicality and timing take over the room.

Worth noting

What keeps it from being an easy yes is the unevenness around the edges. The movie alternates between inspired absurdity and very familiar studio-comedy rhythms, then eventually steers hard toward a neat, earnest lesson about responsibility and gratitude. That shift is part of its charm for some viewers and part of its frustration for others.

Bottom line

As a mainstream fantasy comedy, though, it remains effective enough to explain its long afterlife in pop-culture memory. Morgan Freeman gives the whole thing a calm, warm center, and the film’s best jokes are the kind people still quote years later. It is less a great comedy than a very durable one: messy, obvious, and often funny in exactly the way it wants to be.

Top Letterboxd reviews

vi (2.5★) · 2593 likes

the words "do you like jazz" left jim carrey's mouth and my entire life flashed before my eyes

Framesofnick (5★) · 1900 likes

This might actually be the best movie ever made

Silent J (3.5★) · 1631 likes

"B-E-A-UTIFUL." Jim Carrey. The man who taught a whole generation an easy way to remember how to spell beautiful.

alor (3★) · 1258 likes

8 year old me thought this was the funniest movie ever made

Matt The Snapper (3★) · 1118 likes

If God actually had the voice of Morgan Freeman, I wouldn’t be surprised in the slightest.

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Topics

fantasy comedy, slapstick, wish fulfillment, early 2000s, mainstream studio comedy, religious satire, feel-good, absurd humor

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