Review of the DVD Courageous first
released at the end of last year.
If you are familiar with
the work of the Kendrick Brothers and Sherwood Pictures (Flywheel,
Facing the Giants, Fireproof)
then you will know what to expect from their current DVD Courageous.
The them this time is fatherhood
with the focus on four different fathers, three of whom are in the
local police department. Again there is the Albany, Georgia backdrop,
the focus on several different characters, the gentle and attractive
humour, people praying and getting converted and the positive small
town American charm. Perhaps the effort to be multicultural and
multisocial is more obvious. As ever, the acting is good, the
storyline well written and the production values high. The budget was
up fourfold this time, to $2 million dollars (but quickly recouped
many times over at the box office). However, the project was, as
ever, bathed in prayer, involved many extras from the local church,
relied on volunteers and has a credit list that still includes people
like babysitters and caterers, again from the local church. The film
actually ends with what appears to be a Father's Day service at the Sherwood Baptist
church.
So, a
film made by Christians with the laudable aim of drawing attention to
fatherhood and what a crucial role fathers can have on the rising
generation. What's not to like? Well, it was a little long I thought.
It is relentlessly didactic and even if you agree with the basic
premise you might find it a little irritating. The fathers in the
film decide to show what committed fathers they are by signing a
pledge and making a public commitment. One father gives his teenager
daughter one of those purity rings that have been so popular an
controversial in the States. All very American and fair enough for an
American film, perhaps. My real fear, however, is that with the title
courageous the film is suggesting that all we fathers need to do is
to try a little harder, spend a little more time with our kids and
everything will be dandy. It is difficult to say whether the problem
lies in the Kendrick brothers theology or the medium itself. When you
write a story or make a film then you are in a sense acting as God.
There is no failure on the part of the writers to introduce conflict
or to suggest that being a father is easy. Nevertheless it would be
very easy to watch it and even with the closing text in your head
(Joshua 24:15) to think that all we need to do is try a bit harder.
When
I was at university studying English I wrote essays that chiefly
aimed to convert the lecturer. I now see that was a mistake. That is
not what an academic essay is intended to do. Watching and making
feature films is surely not a sin. However, we must always remember
that Christ conquers sin and wins hearts to himself through preaching
not through feature films. Perhaps next time the Kendricks, who are
undoubtedly good story tellers, will try and be more subtle and aim
more at entertainment rather than trying so hard to convert us all.
(An edited version of this piece can be found in the September Evangelical Times)
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