Keeping
the Faith: Ben Stiller (THE ROYAL
TENENBAUMS), Jenna Elfman (EdTV), and
Edward Norton (FIGHT CLUB) star in KEEPING
THE FAITH, a sexy romantic comedy so fresh
and funny, you'll fall head over heels in
love! Jake Schram (Stiller) and Brian Finn
(Norton) are single, successful, extremely
popular guys who have been best friends
since, well, forever. They are about to be
reunited with their other best childhood
buddy -- the feisty, lanky tomboy, Anna (Elfman).
Anna has grown into a high-powered
workaholic beauty whose reentry into their
lives turns this old circle of friends
into a love triangle -- a very complicated
one at that, because Jake's a rabbi and
Brian is a priest. But have faith -- this
gem is going to steal your heart.
From
Touchstone / Disney
Product
Details
Amazon Sales Rank: #5046 in DVD
Released on: 2000-10-17
Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance
Suggested)
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Formats: Color, Dolby, DVD-Video,
Widescreen, NTSC
Original language: English
Number of discs: 1
Running time: 129 minutes
Keeping the Faith, Edward Norton's
directorial debut, centers on Jake (Ben
Stiller) and Brian (Norton), a rabbi and a
priest who've been best friends since
childhood. Both find their callings and
grow into strong spiritual leaders for
their community. The clever and
occasionally slapstick comedy as Jake and
Ben find their places in the religious
community is precisely timed, and the film
begins with a bang. Yet when childhood
friend Anna (Jenna Elfman)--the perfect
woman, a cross between "Jonny Quest and
Tatum O'Neal"--finds them after all these
years, both men fall for the stunning
woman who is married to her career and her
vibrating cell phone. But what starts as
the making of a great joke (of course, the
priest is sworn to celibacy and there's
not much of a market for a rabbi married
to a gentile) turns into a somewhat
mawkish romance with mixed messages about
the meaning of faith and the power of
love. When Anna and Jake secretly begin a
tryst, "just for fun," they of course fall
in love, which is where the movie begins
to unravel, as Anna is oblivious to the
turmoil Jake might be feeling in having to
choose between his faith and her. Jake
turns into a total schmuck, Brian into a
drunken idiot, and every secondary
character becomes a clichéd stereotype,
right down to the yentas in the synagogue
and the kindly mentor (director Milos
Forman) who guides Brian. However, despite
the muck, Norton is surprisingly
sympathetic and Elfman is an adorable
heroine who helps bring some shining, fun
moments to a mediocre film. --Jenny Brown
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