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Keeping the Faith (2000)
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Keeping the Faith could
legitimately be labeled a rehash. In the romantic comedy genre, it tosses in gentle
religious jokes by having the rivals for the heroine's attentions be a couple of
thirty-something clerics - a rabbi and a priest, of course. That way you double the amount
of potential joke material, even if the jokes - you've seen them in the trailers - are as
old as passing out at a ritual circumcision or choking on incense. And, surely, Keeping
the Faith has its share of obvious and predictable plotting, characters, and
slapstick silliness. Picking up an unexpectedly heavy suitcase is physical comedy straight
from old vaudeville routines. And how many times has one party to a lovers' spat stormed
out of the door, only to return because he's stormed out of his own apartment? (That one
is so unoriginal that it must be assumed it was intended as a clever allusion, but it just
comes off as stale.)
And yet... because the film doesn't have an ounce of pretension to
being more than a crowd-pleasing, light entertainment, and because it is so well cast with
engaging young actors and a couple of aging, but canny veterans, it turns out to be an
amiable lark. Ben Stiller (Black
and White, There's Something About Mary, ) is the young rabbi whose
best friend since childhood is now a Catholic priest, played by Edward Norton (Fight Club, American History X). (Norton also makes a competent, if
uninspired, directing debut here.)
Enter Anna Reilly (Jenna Elfman, best known for the Dharma &
Greg television series) as their eighth-grade buddy who moved away, but is back in
New York on an extended business visit. She's a confident and successful corporate
executive complete with ever-present cell phone (cell phone schtick up to here).
With Norton bound to celibacy and Reilly a presumably unsuitable match for a rabbi, the
plot mechanism slips into all the expected places. It's updated with contemporary targets
(exercise freaks, new age psycho-babble, electronics salesmen) and the camera has its own
love affair with New York, providing backgrounds that make you want to jump on the next
plane.
Eli Wallach, a great American actor, has less to do than one might wish
in the role of a senior rabbi; he does it with the skill of an old pro. Anne Bancroft
plays (what else?) the rabbi's mother; it's a variation on the stock role of the
sophisticated, but still-very-Jewish mother. But Bancroft fleshes out the character and
gives it life. And in a pivotal scene (which will not be spoiled here), she becomes every
son's wish fulfillment Mom - unconditional love combined with a touch of hard-learned
wisdom. It works beautifully and adds some substance to the pleasant fluff that makes up
the bulk of the movie.
Norton, as director, lets the film go on much too long at two hours.
The final scenes are redundant and anticlimactic. But why should anyone expect judicious
cutting and tightening from a first-timer, when just about every major studio film
released this year has suffered from undisciplined bloat?
- Arthur Lazere