Friday, 20 November 2009
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The Road: Coming Soon to a Church Near You
By Justin at Faith and GeekeryAwhile back I talked a little about the trend of marketing movies to Christians — both Christian film directors talking about their faith as well as other films that are being marketed specifically to churches regardless of the intent.
I have to say up front that I knew nothing about the movie The Road or the book it came from before doing a little research. I see it has some great actors and it looks like a good story. It’s getting positive reviews, and is a film that may have Oscar potential. I don’t want to criticize the movie itself, but I would like to question how it’s being marketed to Christians.
Jared Wilson at his blog The Gospel-Driven Church mentions an Entertainment Weekly article (which doesn’t appear to be online, although maybe that will change) that talks a bit about The Road’s plans. Directly from the article:
[T]he adaptation of . . . McCarthy’s acclaimed novel about a father (Viggo Mortensen) and son (Kodi Smit-McPhee) traveling through a bleak wasteland is getting the full pitch to Christian audiences . . . Plans include 15 advance screenings for church leaders nationwide, a website featuring free sermon and discussion guides, and a special trailer with extra scenes underscoring the film’s moral message.
The website in question is here, and you can download a PDF filled with multiple sermons and questionnaires. The studio is using a marketing firm that has marketed to Christians in the past.
Jared sums up his feelings on this in a rather direct manner:
Cutting to the chase: The Road will probably be a good movie. Pastors can reference films (and other artifacts of popular arts and culture) till the cows come home. But this is not about helping pastors preach. This is about getting pastors to help impact a film’s box office. None of these guys have impacting evangelical communities as their motivation: they want evangelical communities to impact their bottom lines. We are a market share, a consumer base.
The rest of his post is just as good, so give it a read. I agree one hundred percent: this may be a good movie, but I don’t want to have movie directors and promoters in the church giving us cue cards for sermons and Bible studies. As mentioned before, movies as diverse as An Inconvenient Truth and Rocky Balboa have also been marketed to Christians in the hopes of sales. The trend has been even more prevalent since The Passion of the Christ, so Christians have become a bigger target for marketers.
Another article from Christian Today talks about the plans:
The Road is not a religious film, let alone a Christian one. But the deep questions raised and the spiritual themes embedded present “a unique entry point for those in the faith community to share the hope of the Gospel in a hopeless world,” said A. Larry Ross, president of A. Larry Ross Communications, the Christian media company that was asked to take the film to the faith-based community.
From a pastor whose church is showing the film:
“We need to look at it as a cultural key to build bridges and start spiritual conversations … about the truth,” Phil Hotsenpiller, teaching pastor at Friends Church in Yorba Linda, Calif., told The Christian Post. “People will see it. You’ll miss the opportunity to have a spiritual conversation … and give a biblical interpretation.”
The problem I have with this thinking is that it sets up an urgency that tells us to immerse ourselves in pop culture or else we’ll be irrelevant, and unless you are relevant to the pop culture you will not be relevant to people around you. The same argument could be made about anything from American Idol to the Saw movies.
But here’s another angle:
“I’m not interested in trying to find just the right bait to get people interested in the Gospel. What not-yet-believers need are far more Christians who are willing to really listen and who are interested in genuine relationships and conversations that don’t hinge on whether they ‘make a decision for Christ.’ I don’t feel a need to be a ‘closer’ when it comes to evangelism, but I do want to be able to engage people in meaningful conversation. And to do that requires that I watch movies, like The Road, that explore truth and meaning from new, and even disturbing, angles.”
Take out the last line and I totally agree. To me, the need to follow-up every good movie movie with a way to turn that into an evangelistic pitch isn’t the best way to show God’s love. If you want to be relevant to your neighbor, love them as you love yourself. If you want to show love to a teenager you don’t understand, listen to him. If you’re trying to demonstrate how to follow Jesus, deny yourself. This is a way everyone can be relevant, especially those who may not have $10 for a movie ticket to keep up.
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Comments (4)
Cool movie poster. Viggo rocks. He was great in Eastern Promises.
I love watching movies. And I love that they pop back into my head later as examples when I'm studying the Bible. (I have no idea how many parallels I've found in Harry Potter now.) Not that the authors or actors intend the movies to useful in that sense, but truth is truth regarless of who speaks it and movies often do it memorably.
I completely agree with your last point. Good post, thanks for sharing!
In the book, the father asks God if he has a throat by which he may throttle Him, so I don't really understand what they expect pastors to see in the movie beyond a father's love for his son. I would think that it's too bleak and God-absent for churches to recommend. I'm reading through the book right now, so I'd like to see the movie when I'm done.