
'It's About Caring' So says Steve Carell, star of the new film, Evan Almighty, a modern-day Noah's Ark tale opening this week. We chatted with the main characters … except God. by Peter T. Chattaway | posted 6/20/2007
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On a recent sunny Saturday afternoon on the Universal Studios back lot, several journalists are preparing to interview the cast of Evan Almighty, many with one question on their minds:
Where's God?
Most everyone here is impressed by the performance of Morgan Freeman, who is back playing God four years after he, um, created the role in Bruce Almighty. But Freeman himself is nowhere to be found. This is not too surprising, as Freeman is a busy actor whose talents are constantly in demand; but it does mean the most authoritative voice in the movie won't be here to chat it up.
Not to worry, at least his prophet is here. Steve Carell returns as Evan Baxter, the anchorman—now congressman—who gave Jim Carrey so much grief in Bruce, and got so much grief in return. Evan was a relatively minor character in the earlier movie, but now he takes center stage, as God tells him to build an ark—and, for good measure, compels him to wear the beard and robes of a biblical patriarch.
Carell, whose star rose between the Almighty pictures thanks to The Office and The 40-Year-Old Virgin, says he loved working with Freeman. "He has a way of performing that is so natural and so heartfelt that I really just liked being around him," he says. And he adds that he wasn't worried at all about his co-stars stealing the movie from him, the way he arguably stole Bruce from Carrey.
"The movie is only as good as the sum of its parts, and the funnier it is, the better it is for everybody," he says. "And I have felt the same way about anything I've been in. I don't need to be the person who's being funny. … To me, it's just a sort of joyous experience to have other people make me laugh. I frankly enjoy that more than anything, when others make me laugh really hard."
Carell gets close with a couple of big co-stars
Carell says he also enjoyed working with the animals—many of which were actually on the set, though some were later added digitally. The giraffes and elephants were especially "interesting," he says. "These are animals you always see at a distance at a zoo, and then when you're up close, like within feet of an animal like that, it gives you a completely different perspective on them.
"There's one scene where the giraffe comes up with a bucket in its mouth and comes right up to me, and I was looking two feet away, and you look into a giraffe's eyes, and it sounds funny or kind of weird, but there's, like, this soulful quality to their face that you would never see from a distance like that. So I was happy to do it. It was an experience I don't think I will ever have again, so it was great."
Was Carell nervous about starring in a film with such obvious religious connotations? "No, I don't think so, because I saw it as a fable," he says. "I think the movie is what you want to take away from it, and it just depends on who you are and where you come from. But I think it speaks to most everybody. It's about caring about one another. It's about caring for our planet. And it's about making choices and leaps of faith, and I think those are universal themes. So no, I wasn't fearful of it at all."
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