I'm not going to bother writing an all-out review of "The Adjustment Bureau" - I'm sure many people have already done a better job of that than I ever could. But in summary: as somebody who finds it very easy to enjoy even the worst of films, I rather liked it! Yes, the script was a bit shoddy in places, and yes, the final chase was perhaps a bit lacklustre.
But at the end of the day, what I enjoyed about it was that it's a film that makes you think. It's a film that none-too-subtly explores some favourite themes of mine - the meaning of free will, human choice & responsibility, the sovereignty of God, etc. - and in the process reveals a lot about what our culture believes and cherishes on these issues. Here's a great quote from Russell Moore's theological ruminations on the film:
"This film might, though, prompt us to see in our neighbors a sense of helplessness, a sense of captivity, and a rage that, just maybe, is misdirected toward God. And, perhaps, the film will spur us to wonder whether our neighbors are feeling something of what is true for all of us, apart from the liberating power of the devil-defeating Cross: We are being chased."
I'm not sure the film was really good enough to actually make me feel any of that. But what I did feel, after seeing the film, was profoundly thankful: thankful that the God of the Bible is nothing like The Chairman. God would beat The Chairman in a fight without even breaking a sweat. Let me explain why (warning: spoilers ahead)
First, consider for a moment the nature of the Chairman:
In this way, The Chairman is, of course, a product of our age - a profound confidence in the innate goodness of humanity if only we would be true to the potential within ourselves; and free will and the right to choose as the most cherished possessions we have. As Norris says in one of his early campaign speeches: "the most important thing is the choices we make". Within this worldview, for God to impose his will on us would be cruel and inhumane - making us paramount to slaves.
But this could not be more different from the God of the Bible:
As finite human beings existing in a single moment of time, we can only see one minuscule portion of the picture. What's more, even if I could know what the best choice in any given situation was, I'm far from rational - we constantly choose the things that are against our own best interests based on misplaced affections and sinful desires. Now, I need God's intervention in my life. I hope I come to depend on his direction more as time goes by, not kid myself into thinking that I can do without it. To surrender to his sovereign will, even when it seems directly opposed to the things I would have chosen for myself - now that's true freedom.