Wednesday, 02 May 2012

  • Revelife Reviews: Blue Like Jazz (Movie)

    By Tom Zuniga

    I recently saw Blue Like Jazz.

    What’s Blue Like Jazz, you ask?

    Isn’t that a book, you ask?

    How can one “see” a book, you ask?

    Why was this a real thing, you ask?

    Well, I can answer all but one of those.

    Blue Like Jazz was originally a book, yes, but it is now a film. The nonfiction book, written by the great Donald Miller, chronicles the author’s adolescent journey through faith with many spiritual essays.

    Miller’s “sequel” of sorts to Blue Like Jazz, A Million Miles in a Thousand Years, followed the adaptation of BLJ – indeed, Miller’s life – into a film, as well as elaborating on what it meant to live life like the fullest, richest story.

    It was such a fascinating premise, turning a nonfiction book of spiritual essays into a fictional movie. Loved taking part in its resurrection from a certain stillborn death with a historic Kickstarter campaign.

    Director Steve Taylor even CALLED ME ON THE PHONE to thank me for my help; that’s a voicemail message I’ll consistently hit “9” to save every 40 days.

    After watching my Steve Taylor / Donald Miller autographed movie poster hang on my wall for well over a year, I finally sat in a theater and watched this long-awaited film unfold before my eyes.

    By the end, said eyes were percolating with moisture.

    Blue Like Jazz could be the first “Christian movie” that breaks the barriers of what a “Christian movie” is “supposed” to look like.

    • There is swearing in this Christian movie.
    • There is a lesbian in this Christian movie.
    • There is a logically presented argument against God’s existence in this Christian movie.
    • There are wild parties and drunkards in this Christian movie. Like, really wild and drunk. Not “Christian movie” wild and drunk.
    • And ultimately, there is a PG-13 rating for this Christian movie.

    This certainly ain’t no Kirk Cameron film; perhaps that’s what makes BLJ so refreshing. Bold.

    At the core of the film is young Don — indeed, a pseudo-fictional/non-fictional representation of Donald Miller himself. Don grows up in the Bible Belt of Texas, only to flee home and start anew at Reed College in Portland, “the most godless college in America.”

    Don quickly adapts to his new environment and as a result, grows quite rebellious. Don does things your conservative knitting grandmother would have a heart attack over.

    But Don is real. Don isn’t faking anything. Don is sick of the hypocrisy entrenched within Christianity. Don wants to escape his association to the name of Jesus.

    Like anyone in existence, Don just wants to fit in. Don wants friends. Don wants college to be fun and memorable, a grand old time.

    Throughout his journey, Don encounters staunch atheists and Don encounters genuine believers. Tossed to and fro between opposing spiritual forces, Don must ultimately decide upon one side or the other.

    Featured in the film are some of the book’s unique standout images: Reed College’s irreverent “pope,” the “Sexy Carrot,” and the confession booth, the latter of which was especially striking at movie’s end.

    Blue Like Jazz is earnest and heartfelt as a young man desperately searches for where he belongs – where his faith belongs – amid a real world where:

    • Yes, people swear.
    • Yes, lesbians are real.
    • And yes, there exist calm, rational arguments for God’s non-existence.

    Don’s ultimate decision on faith left me in tears as the credits rolled — whether by sadness, jubilation, or some combination of both, you’ll have to go see for yourself. I highly recommend the investment.

    I hope more “Christian movies” follow BLJ’s footsteps in the years to come. I pray the world’s cynical perception of “Christian movies” starts to shift. That the hypocritical perception of Christians turns as well — that the world would truly know us by our love.

    For current theater listings, click here.

    Did you read Blue Like Jazz? See the film? Thoughts?

Comments (8)

  • OutOfTheAshes@xanga

    What I loved about BLJ is that it wasn't preachy, it wasn't a visual version of a tract, and the story didn't get swallowed up in religious metaphor.  It was a story--a real, realistic, believable story.  A well-told story.  "Christian Art" tends to lose its art-ness because it gets swallowed up by its Christian-ness: this fought against that, and fought well.

    The other thing, though, was that this was my story.  This is the story of everyone who leaves a Christian bubble that they were raised in and encounters the "secular world," the "liberal college world," the real world, for the first time.  I remember how I had to reevaluate my faith, and the way that I portrayed my faith, once I went to college and actually had nonChristian friends.  Don's journey is my journey, and I really appreciated having that story told.  Following Jesus in this world is so much more complex, so much more nuanced, so much more living-in-the-tension than it is usually portrayed.

  • RevoHor@xanga

    AAAHH!!!! YES, I HAVE read the book -- TWICE!! And I DO want to see the movie! But I live in Japan and it hasn't come over here yet and I don't know if it ever will! Please, please, BLJ, come to Japan! I have to see Don and Penny and the nudists running free on the Reed campus! I have to see Don's "cool guy" persona! I have to see the Sexy Carrot! She cracked me up! Ah, how I long to see the confession booth and all the glorious truth that is in the unwatered down reality in which we live!

  • NightCometh@xanga

    The book was spiritual trash, so I'd expect the movie to be much the same. 

  • jmallory@xanga

    The book was great. I can't wait till I get the chance to see it :)

  • llamalima@xanga

    I would tend to agree with @NightCometh@xanga. I feel that Don Miller is a very good writer and I'm sure if I met him in real life he would be a delightful person--his idea of the Gospel is largely incomplete in the book. Not saying he doesn't know the Gospel, but he didn't articulate it too well. I think he feels afraid of preaching the gospel, so doesn't preach anything at all. 

  • OutOfTheAshes@xanga
  • OutOfTheAshes@xanga
  • llamalima@xanga

    @OutOfTheAshes@xanga - Certainly not. But I think we should all have a good grasp of the Gospel. We should be able to describe what the gospel is, with clarity, and I think it is the calling of all Christians to be able to do that. 


    As a description of a Christian's experience, I think it's a very interesting book and I read it for that. As a Christian author, I don't think it's quite complete, yet. 
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