This film is not entertainment, but unabashed Christian propaganda. Actually, it's just a thin, endlessly hokey, unintentionally hilarious farce where a handful of white American Christians save the world.
Kirk Cameron is particularly loathsome during a scene where a skeptic leaves a church during a religious pep-talk given by a Cosby-Show-preacher. Cameron's character tries to convince the skeptic that he must be saved by quoting the Ten Commandments to him and showing the guy how he is but a gnat in the eyes of God because he's broken a few of the commandments. I'm sure Ralph Reed, and the rest of them, were lapping this stuff up, but it was as stilted and forced a moment as I've ever seen on screen.
Of course the anti-Christ is a foreign person -- no American could fit that bill -- who speaks with a comic Russian accent.
Good for a laugh, this film in its DVD form would also make a great drink coaster -- non-alcoholic, of course -- when you're done viewing it.
This is film-making at its most contrived and forgettable.
Kirk Cameron is particularly loathsome during a scene where a skeptic leaves a church during a religious pep-talk given by a Cosby-Show-preacher. Cameron's character tries to convince the skeptic that he must be saved by quoting the Ten Commandments to him and showing the guy how he is but a gnat in the eyes of God because he's broken a few of the commandments. I'm sure Ralph Reed, and the rest of them, were lapping this stuff up, but it was as stilted and forced a moment as I've ever seen on screen.
Of course the anti-Christ is a foreign person -- no American could fit that bill -- who speaks with a comic Russian accent.
Good for a laugh, this film in its DVD form would also make a great drink coaster -- non-alcoholic, of course -- when you're done viewing it.
This is film-making at its most contrived and forgettable.