Calgary Herald

Big Miracle

- JAY STONE

A movie in which the whales play a kind of icebound supporting role. We don't see much of them.

Back in 1988, when the world was a simpler place — although a no less selfish one — a distant story captured the public imaginatio­n. Three California grey whales were trapped under the ice in Barrow, Alaska, the northernmo­st point of the United States. If they weren’t freed in a few days, they would suffocate.

Then, as now, the public imaginatio­n was a beast as elusive as a California grey, and just as likely to get trapped. As explained in Big Miracle, a story “inspired” by the tale of the whales, Tom Brokaw’s NBC newscast had a minute and 40 seconds to kill one night after its big story on the Bush-dukakis debates — it was an election year in the U.S. — and they had a choice of a train crash in India that killed scores of people, or three imperilled whales.

“Whales,” a TV producer says. “Brokaw’s a sucker for those kind of stories.”

Thus are the world’s hearts captured, although I’m still not sure why. Big Miracle is a family film in which the whales — nicknamed Fred, Wilma and Bamm-bamm, after Flintstone­s characters — play a kind of icebound supporting role. We don’t see much of them, and, frankly, they’re not much to look at: big lumpy things whose grace is hinted at in a few underwater scenes.

Most of the action takes place on the surface, where a competing cast of human protagonis­ts — environmen­talists, oil-industry bigwigs, TV journalist­s, politician­s, military officers, natives, and the crew of a Russian icebreaker — is drawn into the drama because it’s something they can cash in on. In the words of J.W. Mcgraw (Ted Danson), head of an oil company who sees good public relations in helping the cause, “Make sure you get lots of good pictures of me and those big fish.”

By the end, it’s the welfare of the whales that unites them, and if a local native kid can sell sheets of insulating cardboard for $20 each to the gathering reporters, where’s the harm?

The whales are discovered by Adam (a laid-back John Krasinski), an Alaska TV reporter looking for big stories in Barrow — before the whales, the best one was about a Mexican restaurant with good guacamole — so he can move on to a larger station somewhere warmer. He’s joined by a go-getting L.A. newscaster (Kristen Bell), who also sees the whale story as a ticket to more airtime, aligning her with Adam in that age-old journalist­ic game of using tragedy to find fame.

Adam’s ex-girlfriend Rachel (Drew Barrymore) hears about the impending disaster and also rushes up to help.

Rachel works with Greenpeace, and her strident espousal of all things non-human is at once touching and profoundly irrational: Big Miracle is surprising­ly clear-eyed about the mixed motives of its characters, even when they’re (pardon the expression) fishy.

The oil guy, Mcgraw, enters the fray, just as he plans to do some controvers­ial offshore drilling. He uses his pull to involve the National Guard, in the person of Dermot Mulroney, to haul an icebreakin­g barge to Ground Zero.

Meanwhile, in Washington, White House aide Kelly Meyers (Vinessa Shaw) sees this as an opportunit­y to make President Ronald Reagan look good.

This becomes especially urgent when Rachel says that, if the government doesn’t help and the whales die, Greenpeace will tell everyone that Reagan killed them.

Director Ken Kwapis (He’s Just Not That Into You, License to Wed) dances around the film’s several love stories in favour of its politics.

For a kids’ movie, Big Miracle has a lot of big ideas, and, occasional­ly, like the people on screen, it seems to forget about the whales entirely, although not while Rachel is around.

Her paean to the connection between whale and human (“we get scared, we’re vulnerable, we need help”) is a Hallmark moment that plays like parody.

Adapting Thomas Rose’s book, Freeing the Whales, screenwrit­ers Jack Amiel and Michael Begler make some pretty astute political points: Big Miracle is less Free Willy and more like a minorleagu­e version of Ace in the Hole, Billy Wilder’s excoriatin­g 1951 film about how the media exploit a trapped miner.

That one ended with the miner dying. Big Miracle is happier, unless you were a Dukakis voter.

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 ?? Courtesy, Universal ?? Animal-loving volunteer Rachel Kramer (Drew Barrymore) greets one of the trapped California grey whales in the Big Miracle.
Courtesy, Universal Animal-loving volunteer Rachel Kramer (Drew Barrymore) greets one of the trapped California grey whales in the Big Miracle.

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