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February 12, 2012

Home > Movies > Reviews > 2010
What If ...
When an investment banker gets a second chance at the life he could've had as a small-town pastor, he learns that God's will is nothing to be trifled with.






What If ...

Our rating: 2½ Stars - Fair Your rating:


Your Comments: see all

MPAA rating: PG
(for some mild thematic elements)

Genre: Drama

Theater release:
August 20, 2010
by Christiano Film Group

Directed by: Dallas Jenkins

Runtime: 1 hour 58 minutes

Cast: Kevin Sorbo (Ben Walker), Kristy Swanson (Wendy Walker), John Ratzenberger (Mike the Angel), Debby Ryan (Kimberly Walker), Kristin Minter (Cynthia)

Related:
Talk About It/Family Corner


Fifteen years have passed since Ben Walker (Kevin Sorbo) shared a tearful goodbye with girlfriend Wendy (Kristy Swanson) at the bus stop in their small town. Instead of going to seminary as he'd originally intended, Ben headed into the business world, and now he's a successful investment banker who's completed his biggest deal yet. But on the eve of a celebratory trip to Paris with his new fiancée Cynthia (Kristin Minter), his brand-new Mercedes breaks down and Mike (John Ratzenberger), a mechanic calling himself an angel, gives him a sucker punch that sends him into a sort of "parallel universe" where he never left Wendy behind.

Ben resists his new life, delivering the world's lamest sermon on his first Sunday as the new pastor in his old hometown. He alienates his older daughter Kimberly (Debby Ryan) by forgetting her name, and sends Wendy into paranoiac tailspins thinking that he's going to divorce her. He wants desperately to be Banker Ben again, but Mike explains that God isn't going to let that happen until Ben surrenders completely to the life he was supposed to have.

Kevin Sorbo as Ben Walker
Kevin Sorbo as Ben Walker

As the evangelical version of the Nicolas Cage film The Family Man (2000), What If … tackles the thorny question of one's calling. Wendy asks, "What if this is one of those moments we're going to regret later?" She's worried about more than just making a mistake. She's worried that Ben is going against God's will for his life.

The movie's logic holds that God has a plan for your life, and that it's possible to go against that plan, thereby screwing up your whole life. As Mike puts it, "God's call always involves a choice." And while the mechanism of "calling" is a mystery best left to better theologians than this reviewer, it seems as though the God of What If … doesn't hold much to free will. You either follow God's plan for your life or your own plan, to paraphrase another of Mike's dictums.

Kristy Swanson as Wendy Walker
Kristy Swanson as Wendy Walker

The big problem with this line of thinking is that it denies God true power over our lives. It makes "calling" a one-shot deal; you either heed it at that moment, or you miss the boat forever. Yet time and again in Scripture we see men and women say "no" to God's call—and then we see God work his will in their lives and in the world anyway. Not only that, but the concept of redemption is utterly absent from What If …, which only offers a "do-over" that would erase those 15 years that Ben allowed the locusts to eat.

While Ben does give voice to repentance from sin, he also throws in a request for God to forgive him for "missing out on everything you wanted me to be." Since the concept pits Ben's good life against his bad life, this feels like moralistic therapeutic deism, rather than a sinner flinging himself on the mercy of a holy God.

John Ratzenberger as Mike the Angel
John Ratzenberger as Mike the Angel

While Sorbo and Ratzenberger nearly save the movie with their solid, committed performances as Ben and Mike, director Dallas Jenkins—son of Left Behind co-author Jerry Jenkins—lets things get way too soggy in the tediously long middle section. Perhaps no actress would be up to the task of enlivening pious Wendy, but Kristy Swanson barely even tries to play against type. She's just no match for Kristin Minter, who steals one scene by making long fingernails seem like they should've been prohibited in Leviticus.

Ultimately, What If … fails before it hits the 10-minute mark. Even though the movie's disdain for non-Christians oozes from every frame, Jenkins doesn't have the gumption to make Ben all that bad of a guy. His assistant seems to adore him, and he makes sure she gets a more-than-generous raise. He might be taking over a company, but his aim is to save the owners from losing everything. It's not like he's Henry F. Potter or anything. He might be a capitalist, but he's the kind who makes it seem like a good idea.

This begs the question of why Ben even needs to be a different man in the first place. Repentance isn't time travel. If it were, then King David never could've written the Psalms. Christ's call to Peter to "go, and feed my sheep" slays us because it follows, not negates, Peter's betrayal. Christ didn't come to earth to hit the rewind button straight back to Eden. He came to turn our sin and sorrow into his glory.




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[Reader Reviews]

Displaying 1–3 of 56 comments

Peter Zhao

July 10, 2011  10:46pm

Another thing: Maybe Christ died to save the rich young ruler. But was the ruler saved in the end? The bible leads us to believe that he did not accept Christ's teaching. Therefore, we cannot say that he was saved. I don't understand how you can completely miss so many of the bible's main points. Did not God say that the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil? Is it not harder for a rich man to enter heaven than it is for a camel to enter a needle's eye? You clearly do not get Christianity. You say that there is nothing wrong with Ben's old lifestyle, that he makes it seem like a good idea. Maybe you need an angel to knock you out into a parallel universe. No idea is good if it does not involve God. The point is, Ben needed God in his life, not that Ben needed to not make money and stuff. Please read your bible and study what you are talking about.

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Peter Zhao

July 10, 2011  10:34pm

Wow. I've never seen a Christian so hateful toward the work of a fellow believer. Seriously? It's wrong to ask God to forgive him for missing out? Why? I can't even ask for forgiveness from God? That goes against major tenets of the Christian faith. Repentance starts by asking God to forgive you. There's nothing wrong with that. The fact is, you do miss out if you don't follow God's will. And another thing. I think your mindset is the one that limits God's power. Sure there are people God choose to work through even when they say no. Jonah is the only one that readily comes to mind. However, does that mean God needs us to fulfill His will? Is God so weak that He needs our help to work in His plan? Do not be mistaken. When the Israelites rejected Jesus, didn't God turn instead to the Gentiles? I believe your theology is mistaken on several points.

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George Deuel

July 03, 2011  9:04pm

True, the logistics and metaphysics of Ben's parallel universe were not explained or realistic but hopefully those who watch this film will give more thought to their choices and choose to serve in God's Kingdom work. My wife and I enjoyed the film.

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