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February 11, 2012

Home > Movies > Reviews > 2010
To Save a Life
Though it's the best-produced church-made film yet, this teen flick tries to tackle too many topics at once, muddling the story—and the transformative power of the gospel.






To Save a Life

Our rating: 2½ Stars - Fair Your rating:


Your Comments: see all

MPAA rating: PG-13
(for mature thematic elements involving teen suicide, teen drinking, some drug content, disturbing images and sexuality)

Genre: Teen

Theater release:
January 22, 2009
by New Song Pictures/Samuel Goldwyn Films

Directed by: Brain Baugh

Runtime: 2 hours

Cast: Randy Wayne (Jake Taylor), Deja Kreutzberg (Amy Briggs), Joshua Weigel (Chris Vaughn), Sean Michael (Jonny Garcia), Kim Hidalgo (Andrea Stevens

Related:
Talk About It/Family Corner


When I walked out of the theatre after seeing To Save a Life, I was pretty positive about this teen flick. This outreach project of California's New Song Community Church has the best production values I've seen from a church-made feature film, tells a good story, and captures both youth group culture and high school life pretty authentically. The movie is poignant, often funny and filled with memorable scenes. But in the weeks since I first saw it, I've been bothered by some weaknesses and unintended messages that have dampened my praise and recommendation.

Loosely based on the hit song "How To Save a Life" by The Fray, the movie opens after the public suicide of an outcast teen named Roger (Robert Bailey, Jr.). Stud basketball player Jake Taylor (Randy Wayne) was Roger's best friend until Jake's popularity accelerated and he began to see misfit Roger as a social speedbump. Broken, guilt-ridden, disillusioned, and confused, Jake begins to ask hard questions. This questioning and unhappiness leads Jake toward life change as he is pursued by a caring youth pastor, Chris (Joshua Weigel), evaluates his relationship with girlfriend Amy (Deja Kreutzberg), and makes a conscious effort to care for others more than self—to love on the unloved.

Randy Wayne as Jake Taylor
Randy Wayne as Jake Taylor

It's easy to tell To Save a Life was written by a longtime youth pastor—in this case, New Song's Jim Britts. Two reasons: 1) The film shows knowledge and understanding of teens, their world, pressures, and culture. 2) With noble aims, it tries to address and help almost every conceivable teen issue: suicide, bullying, cutting, drinking, drugs, parental pressure, premarital sex, fear of failure, dating, parents' divorce, hypocrisy, teen pregnancy, bad-influence friends, loneliness, self-worth, peer pressure, school violence, pressure to succeed, abortion, college stress, rejection. By the halfway point, it feels like an after-school special on, well, everything.

In fact, with so many subplots and themes shoved in, I kept thinking that To Save a Life might have made a better TV series, comparable to the popular (but not as well produced) The Secret Life of an American Teenager. Spreading all of the film's various themes (and Jake's various problems) over a season could have lessened how overwhelming (and a bit cheesy) they feel in two hours. Or maybe the movie could have just focused more tightly on Jake's personal trajectory of change and outreach after Roger's death without the added obstacles—including a villainous pastor's son, and an unneeded and weak climax involving a bomb scare. It is in showing Jake's questioning, emptiness, and transformation that the movie best excels. My favorite scenes were of Jake walking through his popular, party-lifestyle life growing more and more unfulfilled, slowly realizing the truth of Ecclesiastes that life is meaningless without God.

Robert Bailey Jr. as Roger
Robert Bailey Jr. as Roger

Jake's search for meaning leads him to grow more and more interested in what youth pastor Chris has to say. And that is when Jake's changes begin. Jake challenges Chris' hypocritical and apathetic youth group to be different than the world, to care and to reach out to the hurting. He starts a lunch group of Christians to sit together despite their different high school status levels. He seeks out hurting kids like Roger to give them the message that someone cares. And as Jake changes into this new creation, he realistically faces the temptations and trials of a new believer.

That's all great stuff. But the more I thought about the film, the more I realized that while it talks a lot about living differently, living for God and being transformed, it never says why or how. I wish there had been more focus on showing what changed Jake. Was he just trying to be a better person? The youth group becomes a place of acceptance and caring for misfits and sinners, but it seems that their reason is to make sure others don't feel lonely—not because of the gospel of Jesus Christ. In fact, the movie could be read as saying the church is a place where you can fit in, and saving a life is a matter of being nice to the nerds. And honesty, if that is all a viewer gets, it's not that different of a message than from secular teen flicks like Mean Girls.




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[Reader Reviews]

Displaying 1–3 of 32 comments

Vanessa Beltran

October 14, 2010  1:12pm

This movie.. oh man.. is amazing! its sooo emotional... hoping that there are alot more movies coming out like this.. I thank you so much for making this movie happen. i never read the book but i say the movie is alot better. BRAVO!!

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Amber Hughes

August 19, 2010  10:50am

Sorry, I just posted a comment and I didn't realize the rating was right there so here is my rating.

Dana Darowish

August 12, 2010  11:21pm

This comment said it best: Mike Michalovich Posted: March 01, 2010 6:51 PM I think you miss the point. This movie was made for YOU and your church to use as an outreach tool and allow you to invite people who would normally not set foot into your church in. All of the issues that were raised by the movie are issues that come up in Christian youth groups every week. It was a movie that can be used as a discussion starter. Thank you, Michael. I couldn't have said it better myself.

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