Tuesday, October 31, 2017

‘Let There Be Light’ -- our film review "so great!"

Movie reviews for “Let There Be Light” 
including our own
Rated PG-13  1 hour 40 minutes  Official Site: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5804314/

First, our own comments:  The movie is fantastic!   We enjoyed every minute of it—every minute counted.  The leads were perfect, including the real life family of Mr and Mrs Sorbo and their two sons.  A third son dies at age 8 of cancer and when the dad has his death-and-back experience, provides the cryptic message, “Let There Be Light”.  This becomes a quest after his Christian conversion.  Hannity is also great in his role at the end of the movie.

Deliver Us From Evil” (as you well know) is the title of one of Sean Hannity’s books.  In the cyberwar of Islam vs Christianity you have Christ’s Love, vs Islamic beheadings.  The Gospel of Jesus Christ is one of invitation, not threat of death.  This is one point of the movie.

I have enough notes to write completely about the movie but you need to see it yourselves.  I’ll just give you one LDS perspective:  When Kevin Sorbo remarries his actual wife in the movie and the pastor says, “until death do you part”, he says, “No, not at death—I’ve been there.”

The reviewers don’t give enough credit to the Sorbo family.  The sons were great!  We enjoyed the close-up shots of the faces, including the sons, the lovely Mrs Sorbo, and Kevin Sorbo.  The music was great.  At the end, the credits seemed brief, not 15 minutes of thousands of team members to make a mega-movie.  This faith-movie will knock the sox off of losing R-movies.

A personal note:  We have an LDS friend, Medy Fowler, who crossed over, “Home and Back Again” twice and tells of the embrace of the Savior and the beauty of Heaven, including music and vivid colors. She visits with her family members who have passed. They are near us.
                                     

Home and Back Again: My Journey Through the Valley of the Shadow of Death

Imelda Fowler, age 53, is the mother of two and a grandmother of three children. She is also a National and State Power Lifting champion (97 lbs. class), holding several records in the United States. A native of the Philippines, she came to America in 1980, when she was 20 years old. In the summer of 2004, her appendix burst and due to a misdiagnoses by a late-night intern

Now, two bone-head reviews (read and believe the opposite)

The title and opening paragraph from Hollywood Reporter, online, by narky Frank Scheck
Kevin Sorbo plays an atheist who finds God after a near-death experience in this drama executive produced by Sean Hannity.
Let There Be Light represents a clearly personal family affair for former Hercules star Kevin Sorbo, who stars in and makes his directorial debut with the faith-based film. The screenplay was co-written by his real-life spouse Sam Sorbo, who plays his character's ex-wife, and their sons Braden and Shane appear as the couple's offspring. But while Christian audiences will no doubt embrace this heavily proselytizing drama, secular viewers are likely to feel like they've been accosted by a street-corner preacher.

Variety.com reviewer Dennis Harvey opening title and paragraphs

Film Review: ‘Let There Be Light’ by Dennis ‘talking-points’ Harvey

Kevin Sorbo directs and Sean Hannity exec produces an inspirational drama about the spiritual redemption of the "world's most famous atheist."

Kevin Sorbo, the former TV “Hercules” now a busy producer-star primarily in the faith-based entertainment industry, makes his feature directorial debut in the latter mode with “Let There Be Light.” More polished than many of its ilk, perhaps due to executive producer coin from the inimitable Sean Hannity — who gets third billing for a shamelessly self-promoting late appearance — this drama about the spiritual awakening of “the world’s most famous atheist’” is predictably simplistic and maudlin in content. But it should satisfy the target demographic with an inspirational family-values message wrapped in a sudsy narrative.

http://variety.com/2017/film/reviews/let-there-be-light-review-1202593888/

NOTE:  Reader-comments are 100x  better than the reviewer’s!


When they remarry and the preacher comes to “until death do you part”,
Kevin Sorbo says, “No, not at death—I’ve been there.”


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