Viewing Period:
Run Time:
1 Hour, 36 Minutes
Starring:
Director:
Writer:
Producer:
Released in:
2007
Synopsis:
Emmy® -nominee Steve Carell, reprising his role as the polished, preening newscaster Evan Baxter of Bruce Almighty, is the next person selected by God to perform a holy mission in this hilarious comedy. Newly elected to Congress, Evan's life is turned upside-down when God appears and mysteriously commands him to build an ark. But his befuddled family just can't decide whether Evan is having an extraordinary mid-life crisis or is truly on to something of Biblical proportions...Also starring Academy Award®-winner Morgan Freeman, John Goodman, and Lauren Graham.
Copyright:
© 2007 Universal Studios All Rights Reserved.
Will Your Device Play this Video?
- Computer
- Windows
SD(standard definition): Plays as a download or instant stream.
HD(High definition): Not available on this computer.
Macintosh
SD(standard definition): Plays as an instant stream only.
HD(High definition): Not available for playback on this computer.
- TV_end
CinemaNow customers also watched:
CRITIC REVIEWS
Lew Irwin

Critics by and large have concluded that Evan Almighty is no The Ten Commandments, that Steve Carell is no Charlton Heston, and that director Tom Shadyac is no Cecil B. DeMille. "Here's the funniest thing: In trying desperately to reconnect with religious Americans, Hollywood assumes religious Americans are so dumb they'll laugh at anything," Michael Booth observes in the Denver Post. Actually, Lou Lumenick in the New York Post suggests that the movie may be a hit despite its meager offerings. "The Red State folk may be more receptive to this bland, family-friendly entertainment than we cynics living in the Blue States," he says. But Chris Vognar, writing in the Red State of Texas calls Evan Almighty "an unholy mess" and "a movie desperately in search of a soul." The film takes an almost universal pounding in both Red and Blue states. "There's no movie here -- just a concept that holds little promise and can't even deliver on those low expectations," comments Richard Roeper in the Chicago Sun-Times. Despite its huge budget, Liam Lacey writes in the Toronto Globe and Mail, the film winds up as "a lesson in the importance of tameness." He concludes: "It's as if the script were based on a typo in Genesis - you know, the version where the Lord says, 'Let there be slight.'" Indeed, Carina Chocano in the Los Angeles Times remarks that the film feels "like it had been written over a weekend with a book of bad Bible puns in hand." Or as Rafer Gusmn of Newsday puts it similarly in Newsday: "Mostly it feels like a store-bought mix of jokes and sentiments." Claudia Puig in USA Today dismisses it more trenchantly: "It's an almighty, humorless bore," she writes.

Reviewed by: whytry on 3/1/2008 3:30:15 AM
This is a really good family movie.
Lew Irwin

Critics by and large have concluded that Evan Almighty is no The Ten Commandments, that Steve Carell is no Charlton Heston, and that director Tom Shadyac is no Cecil B. DeMille. "Here's the funniest thing: In trying desperately to reconnect with religious Americans, Hollywood assumes religious Americans are so dumb they'll laugh at anything," Michael Booth observes in the Denver Post. Actually, Lou Lumenick in the New York Post suggests that the movie may be a hit despite its meager offerings. "The Red State folk may be more receptive to this bland, family-friendly entertainment than we cynics living in the Blue States," he says. But Chris Vognar, writing in the Red State of Texas calls Evan Almighty "an unholy mess" and "a movie desperately in search of a soul." The film takes an almost universal pounding in both Red and Blue states. "There's no movie here -- just a concept that holds little promise and can't even deliver on those low expectations," comments Richard Roeper in the Chicago Sun-Times. Despite its huge budget, Liam Lacey writes in the Toronto Globe and Mail, the film winds up as "a lesson in the importance of tameness." He concludes: "It's as if the script were based on a typo in Genesis - you know, the version where the Lord says, 'Let there be slight.'" Indeed, Carina Chocano in the Los Angeles Times remarks that the film feels "like it had been written over a weekend with a book of bad Bible puns in hand." Or as Rafer Gusmn of Newsday puts it similarly in Newsday: "Mostly it feels like a store-bought mix of jokes and sentiments." Claudia Puig in USA Today dismisses it more trenchantly: "It's an almighty, humorless bore," she writes.
Reviewed by: whytry on 3/1/2008 3:30:15 AM
This is a really good family movie.
Evan Almighty has 12 user ratings.
Customer Reviews for
Evan Almighty
Write a Review (max 1000 characters):
Please Note: If you have already reviewed this movie, your
new review will update your original review.
Reviewed by: whytry on 3/1/2008 3:30:15 AM
This is a really good family movie.
System Requirements
Streaming
- OS: Windows XP, Vista or Windows 7 / Mac OS X
- Browser: IE 7 and higher / Firefox 3.6 and higher/ Safari 4 and higher / Google Chrome
- Adobe Flash player (10.3 or higher)
- Broadband Internet connection such as DSL or Cable Modem
Download
- OS: Windows XP, Vista or Windows 7
- Windows Media Player 10 or higher
- Browser: IE 7 and higher / Firefox 3.6 and higher
- Broadband Internet connection such as DSL or Cable Modem
Video File Info:
- Download: 2200 Kbps (kilo bits per second)
- Stream: 2000 Kbps with adaptive setting
- Approximate file size for download: 1.5GB
- Sound: Stereo
- Premium movies are of superior playback quality. This is a larger file. A higher speed broadband connection is recommended and the ability to play the movie while it is downloading may take longer
MORE INFORMATION:
Screen Format: Color
Language: English