kittygilchrist
08-27-2015, 07:06 PM
In Nashville recently, I met one of the brothers who produced and directed this film. He had given a talk about it at a gospel music Association event.
It is about the power of prayer.
gomoho
08-27-2015, 07:32 PM
Small world with this movie. I sold a house to the parents of one of the young girls in th movie. Beautiful young girl with a beautiful family.
Taltarzac725
08-28-2015, 03:30 PM
It is at the Old Mill Playhouse. https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/thevillagesfloridamovietimes.php
kittygilchrist
08-28-2015, 08:56 PM
Thanks Tal, I showed up at Rialto today and learned War Room is at Old Mill....I saw Mr. Holmes. It is a good story, not on the classical whodunit lines, and worth seeing just to watch Ian McKellan. Possibly an actor Oscar quality performance.
Taltarzac725
08-29-2015, 06:03 AM
Thanks Tal, I showed up at Rialto today and learned War Room is at Old Mill....I saw Mr. Holmes. It is a good story, not on the classical whodunit lines, and worth seeing just to watch Ian McKellan. Possibly an actor Oscar quality performance.
I saw that too and ran into a group of neighbors who were in the same aisle that I wanted to sit in. They let me into that space even though the theater was quite crowded.
Prayer has been my only resource at times in my battles with getting practical materials into libraries of all types for survivors/victims of crimes in my 224 613 Project. Something I have worked on from January 1991 on-and-off. That and my love of movies which was intensified while auditing two Film Studies classes from the University of Nevada, Reno Film Critic Howard Rosenberg back in the early 1980s. Howard Rosenberg (http://www.unr.edu/art/people/howard-rosenberg)
John_W
08-29-2015, 10:27 AM
IMDB (Internet Movie Data Base) is my homepage, so I just looked up War Room on IMDB and there are only two reviews from patrons. Each couldn't be more different, but are very in depth. Maybe they are so different because they had their own agenda before ever seeing the film. Here they are;
So bad Jesus himself would take his father's name in vain if he saw it
3 out of 10 Stars
Author: Steve Pulaski from United States
28 August 2015
Alex and Stephen Kendrick's new film "War Room" is the worst kind of Christian film in that it starts out very promising only to retract into terribly overwrought melodrama, so desperately unconvincing it should ask for its own forgiveness. For every positive attribute it bears, there's a crippling negative that sacrifices its believability as a film and in its impact as a parable. It's the kind of film that seems specially made for the Kendrick brothers' megachurch to inspire nothing other than obnoxious "hallelujahs," empty ideas of hope, and undeserved emotional reactions.
"War Room" does get considerable credit for having the audacity to make nearly its entire cast African-American, a demographic that hasn't been serviced by faith-based filmmaking that doesn't boast "Tyler Perry Presents." In addition, the characters in the film are not positioned as derelicts or troublemakers, but rather affluent albeit troubled with personal happenings. It's unfortunate their characters are hamfisted into such a hackeneyed, unbelievable story.
The film concerns Elizabeth Jordan (Priscilla Shirer), a real estate agent caught in the middle of a failing marriage to her husband Tony (T.C. Stallings). Tony has not only been teetering on the edge of unfaithfulness, but has also been working so much that he has no time to spend with his wife. He's also grown very greedy and hostile, resulting in the simplest conversations being argumentative.
Elizabeth gets the marital guidance she needs from Miss Clara (Karen Abercrombie), an elderly black woman and devout believer trusting in Elizabeth to help sell her house. Miss Clara, who's husband died in combat many decades ago, tells Elizabeth one of the fundamental ways to repair her marriage is to construct a "war room," a tight-knit, closet-size place in your home exclusively for praying and biblical thinking. She does so, and with that, overhauls a lot of negative energy that soon bleeds over to her workaholic husband in how to handle their daily stress.
One of the most horribly cringeworthy scenes of the year comes when Elizabeth decides to expel God from her home. She wanders around her home, screaming about how the Devil has corrupted her joy for life and made her home less a sanctity but a boiling pot of arguments between her and her husband. She declares that the home is Jesus's and overthrows Satan in one of the silliest and eye-rolling monologues of the year. In another scene almost as cringeworthy, Miss Clara hears about Elizabeth repairing a bond with her husband and proceeds to do a happy dance and expound upon how her God is the best God, how he'll never retire or be fired, and so forth. Peppered in are other horribly unconvincing scenes, such as Tony's bad dream and a holdup that only add to the film's array of lackluster suspense in such an inconsequential film.
These scenes of overblown theatrics do nothing for the film but make the characters look like a bunch of clowns and caricatures. This is unbelievable behavior even for the hardened evangelicals, and the Kendrick brothers keep these kinds of scenes coming. Almost as dry and ridiculous are the scenes between Miss Clara and Elizabeth that concern marriage and righteousness that feel like roundtable discussions at a Bible study rather than real human conversations. These kinds of scenes go on for about five minutes and do nothing but sermonize the film's many morals of forgiveness and grace, breaking the golden screen writing rule of showing instead of telling.
It's a real shame that the Kendrick brothers' writing is this miserably bad because the performances here may be some of the strongest seen in their film career. Shirer is in nearly every frame of the film and does a remarkably nice job at being a leading actress, especially when she's not expounding corny monologues about overthrowing Satan from ruling her home, and Abercrombie, despite her age, is a lively and energetic presence, again, when she's not spouting some of the shamefully stupid dialog the Kendricks have given her.
While "War Room" admirably doesn't deal the audience the incredible misguided idea that the lack of faith makes a person any less moral or good, it does give audiences the ludicrous idea that if one prays hard enough that good things will come. Never does it take into account of unanswered prayers, long-term waiting for something to happen, and the paradox that the characters had to work on their own to save their marriage, rendering the praying as pretty useless at the end of the day.
I understand "War Room" has ideology to uphold, but just when I thought I hit the bottom of the barrel of Christian cinema for the year with "Faith of Our Fathers," I land at the bottom of the barrel with an even louder thud upon seeing this picture. This film is so bad and contemptible that it would make Jesus himself take his father's name in vain.
You will laugh, cry, rejoice, and praise God!
10 out of 10 Stars
Author: manny_burgos from United States
28 August 2015
I just finished watching this movie with my wife. If you have seen and liked "Fireproof" or "Facing the Giants" from the Kendrick brothers, then you're going to love, love, love this movie.
While a movie about prayer may seem like a boring concept (I almost didn't see it because of its theme), trust me, believers everywhere are going to be so blessed, touched, and inspired by this movie. I kid you not, but people were literally shouting "Amen!", "Hallelujah!", and "Glory!" in the movie theater (in Amarillo, TX).
My wife and I laughed, cried, and rejoiced throughout the movie. When it was over, I believe that everyone clapped for a good 30+ seconds. That's how good it was. Even when the credits were rolling, no one moved for about a minute or so since we were trying to absorb and process the impact of this movie.
I won't reveal any spoilers, but suffice to say that this is a movie about a lukewarm Christian family dealing with a crisis. An old Christian lady intervenes and offers some advice to the young Christian mother. That advice ends up transforming so many lives.
If you or your family are struggling with anything right now, then do yourself a favor and go see this film. You won't regret it.
I honestly believe that this might be the Kendrick brothers best movie yet -- and that says a lot since their previous films have been simply terrific and inspiring.
Thank you Kendrick brothers for making this beautiful and powerful film!
9.5 out of 10 (my wife rates it a 10 out of 10)!
chachacha
08-30-2015, 09:34 AM
interesting to see two totally different perceptions.
Taltarzac725
08-30-2015, 12:19 PM
interesting to see two totally different perceptions.
Hope to see some TOTV reviews. I seldom go to religious movies like this or see them on DVD unless they are produced locally or have some star I like. I remember one made in the Leesburg, FL area which was OK. It premiered here in the Villages around 2010.
tedquick
08-30-2015, 04:58 PM
My wife and I went to [I]War Room[I] last night with some friends. They gave it an 8, 8 & 9 out of ten, while I gave it a strong 7. It seems to me that Steve (the party who wrote the negative review) must have some agenda. I do agree that "some" of the scenes that he refers to might have been a little over the top but I choose to think that was intentional on the part of the Kendrick brothers. Sometimes exaggeration is a good thing.
I highly recommend the film.
ted
vBulletin® v3.8.11, Copyright ©2000-2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.