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Home > Movies > News & Miscellaneous > 2008 |  
The Making of an Evangelist
CT Movies visited the set of a new film about the life of Billy Graham, focusing on his early years and call to the ministry, which recently finished filming in Nashville.
| posted 5/27/2008


Editor's note: Since this story was posted, the film has been given a release date of October 10, 2008.

Billy Graham's life story has been told a number of ways through various media, but filmmaker Bill McKay wanted to tell it a little differently: From the perspective of a non-believer.

So, for Billy: The Early Years—tentatively slated for release this fall—McKay tells the evangelist's story from the viewpoint of a dying Charles Templeton. As a young man, Templeton had been one of Graham's friends and colleagues in Youth for Christ, only to later turn his back on his faith, becoming an agnostic.

Thus, as Salieri told Amadeus' story, so does Templeton—played by Oscar winner Martin Landau—tell Graham's, reminiscing from his deathbed.

Martin Landau and producer Bill McKay
Martin Landau and producer Bill McKay

"I wanted to tell Billy's life through the prism and experience of an atheist," said McKay, the film's writer and producer. "I think we have a film that will make an impact."

McKay's mother, Marjorie Bostrom, was a roommate with Ruth Bell at Wheaton College in 1941. Bell went on to marry Billy Graham, another Wheaton student at the time, and McKay's family and Graham's family occasionally stayed in touch over the years.

The new movie was filmed during April and May in and around Nashville, Tennessee. Filmmakers are currently in post-production, hurriedly editing away. McKay has said that he wants to finish the movie quickly, so it can be released while the ailing Graham, who turns 90 this fall, is still with us.

Billy: The Early Years, starring up-and-coming actor Armie Hammer in the title role, covers Graham's life from his salvation experience at a 1934 tent revival in Charlotte, North Carolina, through moments of uncertainty concerning his calling, before coming full circle to become the great evangelist known throughout the world.

Catching a rising star

Veteran TV director Robby Benson—the voice of Beast in Disney's Beauty and the Beast—told CT Movies that he is quite impressed with Hammer's performance.

"I feel like I'm watching the beginning of a major movie star's career," Benson said. "I don't think I've ever seen anything like it in four decades of work. I've never seen anybody work as hard, I've never seen anyone absorb information as well, and to be honest, I've never seen the camera love someone as much as it does Mr. Armie Hammer. He's just absolutely brilliant."

Shooting the tent revival scene
Shooting the tent revival scene

Hammer, 21, was slated to play the role of Batman/Bruce Wayne in an upcoming Justice League movie, but that project has been put on hold indefinitely. Now he finds himself playing another "superhero" altogether—arguably the most influential evangelist in history.

To get ready for the role, Hammer studied tapes, read sermons, watched Graham preach, learned his body language—and prepared spiritually.

"To be Billy Graham," said Hammer, "you need to get your head in the right place, because everything Billy Graham said, he meant 100 percent. He had such faith. There has been a lot of studying my Bible again, knowing what it is Dr. Graham is talking about, getting my head in the right place spiritually to be able to play the part. We are doing everything above and beyond to maintain integrity for this film, and for Dr. Graham."

"We are absolutely faithful to Billy's story and the gospel message," added McKay. "We don't deviate at all."

Benson said he was undeterred by the film's relatively small budget of $5 million.

"Making good movies is not always about how much money you have," he said. "It's about how clever you can be, and about how much experience you and your crew have. You don't need to make a $100 million movie to make something look spectacular and touch your soul."

Going back in time

In addition to the challenges of telling an entire man's life story in two hours, recreating the time period is has been a challenging obstacle.

Shooting the tent revival scene
Shooting the tent revival scene

"We are being exceedingly meticulous to what that period was like," said McKay. "What clothes they wore, the mourner's bench, even the preaching styles of that time in contrast to 2008. Every element of this film is period."




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