‘Jesus Revolution’: Faith-based film ‘inspirational,’ ‘believable’

From "The Baptist Paper" : "‘Jesus Revolution’: Faith-based film ‘inspirational,’ ‘believable’"

A hippie-led revival that graced the cover of Time magazine in 1971 is the subject of an upcoming faith-based film that has the goal of sparking another movement of spiritual renewal. 

“Jesus Revolution” (PG) tells the story of the Jesus movement with a focus on three individuals who helped lead it: California pastor Chuck Smith, hippie evangelist Lonnie Frisbee and a young Greg Laurie. It stars Kelsey Grammer (“Cheers,” “Frasier”) as Smith, Jonathan Roumie (“The Chosen”) as Frisbee, Joel Courtney as Laurie, Kimberly Williams-Paisley (“Father of the Bride”) as Laurie’s mother and Anna Grace Barlow as Laurie’s girlfriend and future wife Cathe. 

It opens in theaters Feb. 24 and was produced by the same company — Kingdom Story — that made “I Can Only Imagine,” “I Still Believe” and “American Underdog,” among others.

Producer Andrew Erwin said the film’s themes — the search for truth and the meaning of life — are timeless, even if the events took place five decades ago.

‘The right questions’

“Every person in the country needs to see this film,” Erwin told The Baptist Paper.

“These were kids asking the right questions. They were seeking the right thing — they wanted the truth. They wanted meaning. They wanted love.” 

Many of the hippies, though, were searching for truth in the wrong places, Erwin noted.

The film opens in late-1960s California as Laurie and his friends embrace the love-and-peace culture of the era and its experimentation with psychedelic drugs. But this group of hippies soon meets another hippie, Frisbee, who rejects drugs and encourages his generation to follow Christ. 

Frisbee’s unique blend of gospel and hippie culture receives a boost when the straight-laced Chuck Smith welcomes him into his church in a controversial move that leads a few members to bolt. 

“There is an entire generation right now searching for God,” Frisbee tells Smith in the film. “The trouble is, your people reject them.”

Soon, hundreds of hippie Christians are attending Smith’s church, which grows so fast he sets up an outdoor tent. Smith’s view is simple: Frisbee may be barefooted, but he’s delivering the gospel to a new generation that desperately needs it. 

In the film’s final acts, Smith and Frisbee clash over the direction of the church, and Laurie launches his own ministry.

“Jesus Revolution” is one of the best inspirational movies, with a solid script, a music score that tugs at the emotions and an all-star cast that makes every scene believable. Roumie is so good, it doesn’t take long to forget he portrays Jesus in “The Chosen.”

Power of unity

The film includes multiple positive messages.

It reminds today’s church that evangelism is often uncomfortable but will — with patience and time — bear fruit. Methods may change, though the gospel does not. In one powerful scene, we watch Smith wash the feet of the hippies in a display of humility. 

It reminds us of another universal truth: People are always searching for truth yet often in the wrong places.

The film also includes solid messages about the power of unity (the church flourishes when Smith and Frisbee work together) and the power of love (Smith’s embrace of hippies contrasts with the message they typically hear). 

“They were told that drugs and LSD were going to be what unlocked their mind to truth,” producer Andrew Erwin said of the hippie movement. “But on the back of that, these groups of hippies had this legitimate spiritual awakening, and then it just swept the country. That’s where the term ‘Jesus freaks’ came from. It’s a fantastic story. It’s powerful.”

Roumie wants the film to spark another spiritual awakening: When people realize “God is their identity, everything falls into place.” 

The film is free of coarse language, sexuality and violence. It does include thematic elements, including one scene showing the aftermath of drug use (we see people hallucinate and one woman frothing from the mouth, though it’s brief). 

Joel Courtney
Sick (2023) Review: Kevin Williamson’s COVID Slasher Delivers Heart-Stopping Tension

No spoliers!

From "High on Films" : "Sick (2023) Review: Kevin Williamson’s COVID Slasher Delivers Heart-Stopping Tension"

The irony of a slasher film set around a lakeside cabin and being released on Friday the 13th should not be lost on horror fans. Even though Sick, the latest outing from horror icon Kevin Williamson, does not feature the murderous hockey mask-wearing son of Mrs. Voorhees, it is still an adrenaline-filled, gutsy, and brilliantly-paced flick that offers enough caustic wit and slasher thrills that fans have come to expect from Williamson.

Set amidst the COVID-19 pandemic and directed by John Hyams (the man behind the underrated Alone (2020)), Sick is another winning entry amidst the slasher revival that began in the preceding decade.

Before the film opens, the opening title cards already ground the narrative in a specific moment in time—April 3, 2020. COVID had evolved from being just an international conspiracy to spreading its tentacles all around the world. In the USA, where the film is set, most states had already imposed stay-at-home orders.

The opening scene of the film follows Tyler (Joel Courtney), an everyday college frat guy, shopping at a supermarket aisle. If one is familiar with Williamson’s slasher book, we know that the film is heading towards an opening kill scene. But preceding the carnage, the script (written jointly by Kevin Williamson and Katelyn Crabb) cleverly grounds itself amidst the paranoia prevalent during the early days of the pandemic.

Whether it be Tyler’s rush to pick up the last daily essentials at the supermarket or sneering suspiciously at a person coughing behind him at the billing queue—Williamson holds up a somewhat satirical mirror to our fears regarding an unknown virus. Just as he is shopping, Tyler receives a text message from an unknown number (a wink for the Scream fans) that asks, “Wanna party?” While Tyler is initially excited by the prospect promised in the message, his enthusiasm soon dissipates when his anonymous messenger becomes more stalker-like.

A nervous Tyler hurriedly heads back to his dorm room, where a surprise awaits him. 

Joel Courtney
‘Jesus Revolution’ Film’s Slogan Says When You Open Your Heart, There’s Room for Everyone | OFFICIAL TRAILER

From "EurWeb" : "‘Jesus Revolution’ Film’s Slogan Says When You Open Your Heart, There’s Room for Everyone | OFFICIAL TRAILER"

*The official trailer for “Jesus Revolution” officially dropped, starring Joel Courtney (“The Kissing Booth”), Jonathan Roumie (“The Chosen”), Kimberly Williams-Paisley (“Father of the Bride”), Anna Grace Barlow (“The Goldbergs”), and Kelsey Grammer (“Frasier”).

The film, directed by Jon Erwin and Brent McCorkle, with a screenplay by Jon Gunn and Jon Erwin, portrays the true story of a divided moment in time when people came together by checking their preconceptions at the door – and developed a movement by listening to each other and looking beyond their own beliefs. This revival of radical and newfound love led to what “Time” Magazine, in 1971, dubbed a Jesus Revolution.

In the 1970s, young Greg Laurie (Joel Courtney) is searching for all the right things in all the wrong places: until he meets Lonnie Frisbee (Jonathan Roumie), a charismatic hippie-street-preacher. Together with Pastor Chuck Smith (Kelsey Grammer), they open the doors of Smith’s languishing church to an unexpected revival of a radical and newfound love of Jesus Christ and His teachings.

For a special national preview showing on February 22, thousands of people across America can experience this profound true story of revival on the same day, at the same time by requesting free tickets while supplies last at JesusRevolution.Movie.

Embed Block
Add an embed URL or code. Learn more
Joel Courtney
'Sick' Production's Design Was Inspired by 'World War Z' and 'A Quiet Place'

From SyFy : "'Sick' Production's Design Was Inspired by 'World War Z' and 'A Quiet Place'"

It's crazy to think how we're about to hit the 3-year anniversary of when the novel coronavirus completely changed our world forever. Those early months of lockdown — the fear, the uncertainty, the panicky hoarding of toilet paper — felt like humanity's number was finally up; that the fabled end of days had finally arrived on our collective doorstep, four horsemen in tow.

Most of us would probably like to have the memory of that existential dread wiped from our brains, but production designer Jenny Möller (Happily) found herself relying on it for Kevin Williamson's pandemic-inspired slasher flick, SICK (exclusively streaming on Peacock right now).

"At the time, we didn't know anything about the disease and we didn't know how it was transmitted," she explains over a Zoom call with SYFY WIRE. "We were all wearing masks and standing five feet apart and wiping absolutely everything down."

Joel Courtney
New Movie Releases 2023: A Complete Guide

Jesus Revolution

 

The true story of Greg Laurie (Joel Courtney), a young man who was raised by his single, struggling mother in 1969. Then, in 1970 Greg joins a group of hippies as they descend their way onto a Southern California community, and along the way brings life to a pastor’s languishing church and its community. In the end, America will have its greatest awakening spiritually ever. 

Joel Courtney
Film Review: "Sick"

No spoliers!

From Josh at the Movies : "Film Review: Sick"

Anytime Kevin Williamson takes on writing duties for a horror film, there is cause for celebration. Responsible for some of my favorites in the history of the genre—including the Scream franchise, I Know What You Did Last Summer, The Faculty, and Cursed—Williamson’s name amongst the credits for any project warrants attention. His latest script, co-written by Katelyn Crabb, delivers big on one major feature prevalent in many 90s greats: chase scenes. In fact, Sick takes it one step further by essentially evolving into one massive chase, courtesy of a foreboding stalk-and-slash murderer. Directed by John Hyams (2020’s Alone), Sick wrings every ounce of tension from a visceral, effective script. Essentially a thriller fan’s wet dream, the sheer intensity and nail-biting madness of its finest moments will shake any casual viewer to their core.

Remember back in April of 2020, when COVID-19 forced the entire U.S. population to effectively quarantine in their homes? How about the constant need to wear masks, sanitize not only hands but also items fetched from the supermarket, or the obsessive paranoia that literally anyone around could spread the virus? Just in case this period has been swept under the rug of one’s mind, Sick arrives to reopen the wounds of trauma. The film begins innocently enough, as Tyler (Joel Courtney, The Empty ManThe Kissing Booth) is out doing some grocery shopping. Creepy incoming texts from an unknown number definitely evoke the Scream series. Someone inquires if Tyler wants to party, with one major caveat—“will only play if you’re Covid safe.” Before he heads home, Tyler then gets sent a photo proclaiming he has a “nice ass”—this mysterious person has literally snapped a pic from the checkout line!

Joel Courtney
47 New Movies Coming To Netflix In 2023 That Are Definitely Worth Watching

Via BuzzFeed:

30. Players

 

Getty Images

What Netflix revealed about the movie: "New York sportswriter Mack (Gina Rodriguez) has spent years devising successful hookup 'plays' with best friend Adam (Damon Wayans Jr.) and their crew, but when she unexpectedly falls head over heels for one of her targets (Tom Ellis), they all must learn what it takes to go from simply scoring to playing for keeps."

Starring: Gina Rodriguez, Damon Wayans Jr., Tom Ellis, Joel Courtney, Liza Koshy, Augustus Prew, and more

When it premieres: Late 2023

Joel Courtney