The Genius Club
The Genius Club | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Tim Chey |
Produced by |
Executive Producer: Keiki Nishimura Stephen Baldwin and others. Producers: Arch Bonnema Daishi Takiishi Tim Chey and others. |
Written by | Tim Chey |
Starring |
Stephen Baldwin Tom Sizemore Jack Scalia |
Music by | Daniel Bijan |
Cinematography | Tyler Allison |
Edited by | Tim Chey |
Distributed by | RiverRain Productions |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 110 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Genius Club is a 2006 film from the United States written and directed by Tim Chey. The film was released on October 27, 2006 via the Cinemark Theaters.[1]
The film tells the story of seven geniuses who try to solve the world's problems in one night in order to prevent a nuclear bomb from exploding in Washington, D.C. The film was produced and distributed by Cloud Ten Pictures and RiverRain Productions.
Plot
On Christmas Eve, Armand (Tom Sizemore), a terrorist who has a hidden nuclear device in Washington D.C., forces the president of the United States government (Jack Scalia) to round up seven geniuses with IQs over 200. The group consists of a casino owner (Carol Abney), a biochemist (Paula Jai Parker), a pro-baseball player (Matt Medrano), a seminary student (Jacob Bonnema), an economics professor (Phillip Moon), a painter (Tricia Helfer), and a pizza delivery guy (Stephen Baldwin).
The government places them in a bomb shelter and explains the group that they are there to solve the world's problems in one night; if they fail to gather a thousand points before morning, the terrorist will detonate the hidden nuclear device planted in the basement of the 'genius lair'.
Cast
- Carol Abney as Julia Endersol
- Stephen Baldwin as Rory Johnson
- Jacob Bonnema as Jacob Chernov
- Tricia Helfer as Ally Simon
- Matt Medrano as Jose Delgado
- Philip Moon as Professor Lee
- Paula Jai Parker as Tatiana
- Huntley Ritter as Brian Mehlman
- Jack Scalia as President
- Tom Sizemore as Armand
- Arch Bonnema as Norm, the president's Chief of Staff
- Dimitri Diatchenko as Jesse The Mechanic
Background
The film was marketed during the 2007 Marché du Film (film market) which ran simultaneously with the 60th annual Cannes Film Festival.
Director Tim Chey wanted to make a film about the world's issues while combining the humanity and intelligence of the various character geniuses.[2] Arch Bonnema produced the film, and his son Jacob plays Jacob Chernov, the seminary student.
The film is not explicitly religious, though it is Christian in its tone and message; seminary student Chernov, for example, at times quotes the Bible and answers the "meaning of life" question by observing that "there is no meaning outside of God."
Both director Tim Chey, who is a Christian, and the producers believed it was important that a "real Christian" play the part of Jacob Chernov, hence the selection of Jacob Bonnema, a Christian like his father.[3]
Critical reception
Many American critics thought that the movie was static and heavy-handed.[4][5]
Yet, its Christian message did appeal to critics from Southern Vanity, a Dallas-based lifestyle magazine, and it won the Dove "Family Approved" Seal in June 2008.[6]
Distribution
The movie was released on DVD in September 2008.
See also
References
- ↑ The Genius Club at the Internet Movie Database.
- ↑ Chey, Tim Web site. Last accessed: April 28, 2008.
- ↑ Maurstad, Tom. Dallas Morning News, feature article, October 27, 2006
- ↑ Maurstad, Tom. Dallas Morning News, film review, October 27, 2006
- ↑ Cogill, Gary.WFAA-TV, film review, October 27, 2006.
- ↑ The Genius Club review by the Dove Foundation at the Christian Cinema web site, 2008. Last accessed: October 3, 2008.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Genius Club |
- The Genius Club
- The Genius Club at the Internet Movie Database
- Tim Chey web site