Phenomenon

1996 Drama

Director Jon Turteltaub followed up the hit While You Were Sleeping (1995) with this fantasy similar to Charly (1968) and a film from the previous year, Powder (1994). John Travolta stars as George Malley, a humble mechanic in a rural California town. On his 37th birthday, George celebrates at a pub with friends Nate (Forest Whitaker) and Doc (Robert Duvall), the local physician. When he steps outside, George observes a bright light in the sky that knocks him briefly unconscious. When he awakens, George has incredible intellectual powers. He checks books out of the library in armfuls, becomes an inventor, a psychic, has telekinetic powers, predicts an earthquake, and memorizes Portuguese in minutes. Using his newfound powers, George becomes a hero, but he can't totally win over the spooked townsfolk or the standoffish Lace (Kyra Sedgwick), a single mom burned by love once too often. As George's kindness breaks down Lace's reserve and a romance begins, his fame spreads, bringing him to the attention of the FBI and curious university scientists. Similarities between George's powers and the alleged benefits of Travolta's religion, Scientology, led to charges that the film was veiled pro-Scientology propaganda. more..

Director: Jon Turteltaub

Starring: John Travolta, Kyra Sedgwick,Forest Whitaker, Jeffrey DeMunn,Robert Duvall

Reviews

  • It's about change, acceptance and love, and it rounds those three bases very nicely, even if it never quite gets to home.

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    26 April 2013

  • John Turteltaub directed the drama, which lapses into medical jargon and new-age clichés near the end, but it scores telling points with its respect for intelligence and optimistic view of human potential.

    David Sterritt - Christian Science Monitor

    26 April 2013

  • Phenomenon is a fantasy about super-intelligence that works best if you can switch off your brain. Those who can will reach weepy nirvana. Those who can't will find this sticky-sweet wallow a bit, well, dumb.

    Susan Wloszczyna - USA Today

    26 April 2013

  • But this soggy, sentimental tour through a rural dreamworld of salt-of- the-earth versus supercharged intelligence never quite gets deep enough to touch the soul -- or to make sense.

    Peter Stack - The San Francisco Chronicle

    26 April 2013

  • In time-honored Hollywood fashion, PHENOMENON suggests that smart people are friendless freaks who'd be far better off if only they were just as dumb as the rest of us.

    - TV Guide

    26 April 2013

Awards

  • Most Performed Songs from Motion Pictures

    ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards (1997)

  • Best Fantasy Film

    Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films (1997)

     
  • Thomas Newman

    BMI Film & TV Awards (1997)

  • Favorite Actor - Drama

    Blockbuster Entertainment Awards (1997)

  • Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture

    Image Awards (1997)