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May 26, 2012

Home > Movies > News & Miscellaneous > 2011
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Church Movies Keep Coming
A California congregation joins the parade with a film about human trafficking. But is it a good trend?




Frustrated with the movies Hollywood has been releasing, more and more congregations are making their own feature films. One is Friends Church in Yorba Linda, California, a Quaker congregation with an evangelical megachurch worship style where members are finishing production on a film called Not Today.

"I still hear people say it in the church, 'What are we doing? We're making a movie? What are you talking about?'" Jon Van Dyke, Friends Church's media director, told the PBS show Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly. (Read a longer version of this story, and see the video report, here.)

Shooting a scene in Hyderabad, India
Shooting a scene in Hyderabad, India

Van Dyke is director of Not Today, which tells the story of a spoiled young American who goes on a partying trip to India and gets pulled into the search for a little girl sold to human traffickers. The film was partly shot in India and centers around Dalits, the so-called "untouchables" on the lowest rung of the traditional caste system. Friends Church connected with Dalits during mission trips. The church committed to help free Dalits who had been trafficked and to build 200 schools for Dalit children. And, because the congregation is in the back yard of Hollywood, members decided to make a movie as well.

"It wasn't just to make a movie, because we're not in the movie business; we're a church," said Matthew Cork, the congregation's lead pastor. "But as a church, we do have an obligation and a responsibility to tell the message, and we believe that this was the best way for us."

Is it a good idea?

Some experts question whether this is something local churches should be doing.

"I guess I have an outdated notion that churches are there to inspire parishioners to then go and do things, in whatever genre, whether it's politics, or media, or whatever," said Mark Joseph, a film producer with the MJM Entertainment Group who writes about religion and pop culture. "I'm not sure about church as film studio or church as commercial enterprise."

Religion writer Cathleen Falsani, author of The Dude Abides: The Gospel According to the Coen Brothers, worries that with church-made movies, a strong message could get in the way of a good story.

"I think artistically when you go into any kind of creative act with an agenda, you run the risk of whatever it is that you produce being inauthentic," said Falsani. "And I think audiences—particularly filmgoers, particularly young filmgoers—can smell inauthenticity from ten miles away."
Falsani says she wishes conservative Christians would look more closely for spiritual themes in Hollywood's movies.

"One of the ways that I find my faith most enlivened is when I engage with art, particularly with film, and my favorite films in terms of what I think are faith messages, Christian messages, messages about God's grace and love—not a single one of them is a Christian film."

Joseph says he applauds people who want to make movies to appeal to faith-based audiences, but he doesn't want to see Christian films ghettoized.

"These filmmakers are energized to tell their stories to the world, but if they're too successful as a genre, they'll wall themselves off and end up only making films for each other," said Joseph. "I don't think that's what they're intending to do, but once marketing folks and distribution folks see a genre here, then they will likely create an industry that will ironically cut them off from the mainstream."

Joseph is also concerned about the production quality of many small-budget, church-made films.

"You wouldn't go, you know, to a friend at church for brain surgery who hadn't been to medical school, and I think the same thing applies to filmmaking," he said. "I mean, there's a reason why people go to Hollywood to make films, because these are experienced professionals."

Origins at Sherwood

The church filmmaking trend began at Sherwood Baptist in Albany, Ga., where associate pastors and brothers Alex and Stephen Kendrick have released three feature films since 2003. They are finishing the fourth one, Courageous, about policemen struggling to be good fathers. It releases in September.




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[Reader Reviews]

Displaying 1–3 of 17 comments

Simon Smith

May 18, 2011  12:56pm

I guess "Christian" movies are currently where "Christian" music was in the 1990s. Some are good/great. Some are not. I really like the trend, assuming we pull it off well and make good art, not just true art. But I am bias. I love movies (even non-Christian ones) and try to use them to share God's story. www.reelparables.com

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Mike W.

April 29, 2011  8:03am

To Lyle: do you think making ridiculous, nonsensical insults is a good way for a 'christian' to act?

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Luke Walton

April 26, 2011  4:36am

This article hits an interesting dilemma - how to present the great story of Scripture pitch perfect for the general audience. For four years we have been developing a project to help people to do that - and last year the winner of our competition not only got to make his film, but also won a trip to Hollywood and a sit down meeting with producer Ralph Winter ('X-men', 'Fantastic 4') and the producer who brokered the deal with Sony for 'Fireproof' (mentioned in your article). This year's competition opens shortly for anyone who wants to respond to this article with a great movie idea - check it out at www.enterthepitch.com .

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