Persecuted (2014) Poster

(I) (2014)

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3/10
Through Alice's Looking Glass
bkoganbing18 July 2014
I came thoroughly prepared to trash Persecuted and I was not disappointed. This film which is being hawked as the fundamentalist world view or at least American view is like watching this country through Alice's Looking Glass.

In the not too distant future an ambitious Senator played by Bruce Davison has it in mind to create something called an all faiths bill where folks from a different faiths will be required to recognize each other's diversity and not say anything bad about each other.

Standing in the way of things is leading evangelical James Remar who insists on the biblical promise that Jesus is THE only way to God's forgiveness. When Davison tries to get him on board Remar who comes off in this like a poor man's Harrison Ford gives a resounding 'no'. After that he's framed for murder and he's running like Richard Kimble, but he fights back as best he can.

As if we haven't had enough religious figures in scandal. Jimmy Swaggart, Jim Bakker, Bishop Eddie Long to name a few. I sincerely doubt anyone would have to frame someone. But he's set up beautifully with a young teenage girl who later winds up dead and there's video to prove it. Not to mention all the priests who've been caught playing slap and tickle with altar boys.

If there's anything wrong with this old world today it's too many people insisting their religion is the only way. I'm sure there are similar passages in all religious scripture saying their's is the only true faith.

Interesting also that Persecuted came out at a time when five Catholic men ruled that a fundamentalist employer called Hobby Lobby has a religious exemption female employees can't get contraception. We've also seen the state of Mississippi pass a law codifying that businesses with owners who have sincere religious beliefs about gays doesn't have to deal with them. An anti-gay rights legal firewall before any gay rights laws are passed.

Of course Christians are indeed Persecuted in many places on the globe, most notably in Sudan. But the slaughter of non-Moslems in that country is somehow the equivalent of some employer wanting to not deal with openly gay people or heaven forfend the idea of LGBTQ people having some kind of rights including marriage.

But there will be an audience out there for Persecuted who think this is the wave of the future.

Well boys and girls you're just going to have to get used to the idea that everyone who thinks as you do are not the only ones who have some rights on this old world.

Persecuted is one arrogant movie in its concept and execution.
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3/10
Not ready for prime time
drjgardner22 July 2014
Personally I'm unaware that Christians are being persecuted in the U.S., so if you are and this is an important issue to you, you'll probably see the film in a different light. It seems to me that most of the televangelists who have been exposed for sexual and financial mis-deeds (Jimmy Swaggart, Jim Baker) were actually guilty of these mis-deeds, but I'm also skeptical about the justice system and I like a good conspiracy film.

Putting aside the basic theme of the film, and looking at it only as a movie, the film is certainly not big screen worthy. The plot moves so slowly you'd think this was a French film. The actors are all first rate actors, but they must have been phoning it in for this film. James Remar is particularly disappointing, but perhaps I associate him too much with films like "The Warriors", "48 Hrs", and "Cotton Club". The plot is also a little silly, and there are so many plot flaws you keep asking yourself questions like "Why didn't he make a copy of the video?"

Daniel Lusko, the writer/director says he was inspired by the "Holy Spirit" and that seems evident. It's a film that speaks more of inspiration than aspiration or perspiration. Many of the people involved in the film are first timers, and for a first time production, the film is pretty good, but still not ready for prime time.

The film was originally screened at the National Religious Broadcasters convention and again at the Conservative Political Action conference. These seem to be appropriate venues for the film. But the big screen – no.
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2/10
What did I just watch?
sawsecake21 January 2015
Warning: Spoilers
So full disclosure I am an atheist who went to see this to know how Christians perceive that they are being persecuted in America or are being persecuted in other nations, I got nothing of the sort. So what did I get? I don't know.

So our protagonist is a Christian presumably Catholic as you find rather late in the film living in what I can only assume is an alternate history America wherein the only difference is that this bill attacking his faith would not be utterly unconstitutional, said bill would attack his faith by mandating all religions give all other religions speaking time at their place of worship. If you are even passingly familiar with US law you will note this is highly illegal and even if it wasn't it appears 90% of America is Christian in this film and this would also attack other religions in the same way so they would not pass it nor would I as an atheist, I can think of literally no one who would approve of this bill at all. So he oppose this as anyone wold but in this world he is presumably the only one and thus is framed by the entire government from the Police to the Secret Service for murder, a murder that even our protagonist questions if he actually committed. Then in a very broken story he gets acquitted and gives a speech at the White House who never actually stopped pushing this bill but still let him talk because... well the film never says. So what about this speech? Not in the movie, it just cuts to black.

Pros? Well i did not feel like I was being preached to... so that is good. On that note it also feels like this is not even a pro Christian film, just a bad action film and for some reason the factions are Christian guy V Government that is insane.

Cons? I hated all of the protagonists and antagonist in this film alike, this film has no message, to many plot holes to count, and even by the standards of Star Wars this film is utterly unrealistic.
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1/10
Persecuted: Victims of the boogeyman of their own creation
Platypuschow1 December 2023
Plot

An evangelist finds himself framed for murder and on the run after he refuses to back a senator's proposition calling for sweeping religious reform.

Cast

A lot of people I'm very disappointed in such as James Remar, Bruce Davison and Dean Stockwell while made by the same sadsack who made the new Christmas anti-cancel culture movie.

Verdict

Lusko's new juvenile Jingle Smells was unintentionally hilarious due to how offensively bad it is, this however is a different creature altogether. You see this is played so incredibly serious, a thriller/drama/melodrama/Christian foolishness.

Set in a world where Christians are persecuted by the big bad government. Yep, they went there. It's not a surprise really considering they generally believe that they are persecuted in real life.

It's a painful watch, full of cliches, bad writing and is more unbelievable than a Scyfy original.

This man needs to stop making movies.

Rants

Some people just NEED to be the victim, you can see it in IMDB reviews where people get offended or feel attacked and you can see it in the world. Men who feel like misandry is actually a thing, straight people who don't understand why straight Pride isn't a thing, Christians who think they can't say merry christmas and they're being persecuted and around and around we go. If you want to be a victim and have no persecutor, make one in your own mind.

Breakdown

Embarrassingly written Concept is ridiculous Director is incompetent on every level.
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1/10
Pure Christian propaganda
tbrettge17 October 2014
I watched the movie and was shocked that the "bad guy" is a senator that is trying to legislate a bill that guarantees religious freedom and tolerance.

The "good guy" on the other end is a preacher that is against religious freedom and states that only Christian faith is acceptable. This is really really not up to democratic and modern standards.

This is purely a Christian propaganda film that is supporting intolerance. I do not know how anything like this is even made in the twenty-first century.

This is the worst movie I have seen in years.
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1/10
Another Golden Raspberry Award nominee
djfone27 July 2014
This one's gonna compete with "God's Not Dead" and "America: Imagine the World Without Her" for a Razzie in the God 'n Country Division.

I'm amused how the lead character is described as "The last obstacle to sweeping religious reform in America...". In other words, a theocracy in which everybody's a Christian. How could there be anything else in This Great Christian Nation?

All you really need to know about this film is (1) Glenn Beck was a silent financial backer, according to Christy Lemire of rogerebert.com; and (2) respected character actors like Bruce Davison and James Remar must have been hungry and broke with winter coming on to take these roles.

This storyline, in capable hands, could have made for a really good movie. This ain't it, not by a long shot, though the "Duck Dynasty" crowd will love it.

At least I'll give it this: "Persecuted" had more laughs than "Sex Tape": One.
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Horrible.
I attended a free showing tonight at a friend's church. I already had low expectations for this film, but even those were too high, apparently. This film is more than Right Wing Propaganda. This is a film so forced, it leaves any rational person scratching their heads. The whole film reads like an aborted subplot from the Left Behind series (and I admit I have read all 12 of the core series, even though I thought those seemed forced at times). None of the characters in this are at all relatable except to Christians who believe they are being persecuted by "The Liberal Media" in the United States.

Just perusing the cast list, however, it should be obvious to anyone this is steeped in Hard Right bias (Fred Dalton Thompson and Gretchen Carlson are listed among the cast).

If you want a film about people fleeing from persecution, watch Rambo. If you want a Right Wing film, I'd suggest Atlas Shrugged. But if you want a movie that is horribly plotted, horribly acted, and makes zero sense, this is the movie for you.
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1/10
persecuted yes i was!
debi-lloyd17 October 2014
Persecuted is a very apt title as watching this religious mumbo jumbo was persecutory! Everything is contrived, even the preachers name. Propaganda reigns supreme, the poor Christian right being marginalised by an increasingly diverse religious society. Right wing conspiracy theorists will love this but it is dreadful from start to finish, even good actors could not save this garbage.Religious freedom features heavily but only appears to support christians! Very slow moving film, plot flaws everywhere and cheap looking, defo looks like a made for TV movie and should be restricted to god channels. Save 90 minutes of your life and give this a miss!!!
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1/10
Great actors,sadly wasted
realtybytes-124 January 2015
I disagree with the reviewers who called this movie "pure Christian propaganda." There was nothing remotely Christian-like in this piece of narcissistic fantasy. Generally I love Christian movies, even when the production quality is slightly below par. But this one was just awful.

Badly written (or edited), the script was extremely disjointed, and defied all logic as it jumped from scene to scene with no way to interpret what was happening. And the worst: if viewed by non-Christians, the message is one of extreme intolerance. Totally incongruous with the Christian values shared by millions.

This movie deserved a zero rating, but the lowest rating available was one.
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1/10
Very disappointed
bobparismaui320 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
What a waste of good actors and a story line that had great possibilities. Poorly written and even with good actors was unable to make the movie click. It had all the content of a "made for TV" movie, with an obvious and very predictable story line. With all the evil with the current politics of this would, there was a multitude of ways the story line could have moved...but it didn't. The bad guys came out of no where and ended up now where. There was no back ground to the main issue of the story line and felt it was missing any real depth that makes a good movie. It had some good acting and in all honesty must state that this was the only redeeming quality to "Persecuted."
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1/10
Embarrassing
barbourjohn-1988215 March 2022
This film was somewhat embarrassing from a Christian standpoint. There was no persecution. And there were no Christians. I didn't see any representation of anything that looked remotely Christian. It was a low budget b movie that was horribly one dimensional. I'm sorry to report this because I wanted it to be better.

If you want a good movie about being persecuted watch one of the ones that have been done about the Wurmbrands ( Richard and Sabina)
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10/10
Great Movie
mbearden-57-17591018 July 2014
I read someone else's review before going to this movie which "almost" made me not go. Apparently, the person who wrote that review is "Christian-o- phobic". I am really glad I went anyway. Everything about this movie was First Rate. Sound, Graphics, Lots of excitement. It reminded me a little of a Harrison Ford movie. I also found it to be inspiring. We have all been forced to learn a lot about politics in the last few years. Unfortunately, this movie is not far from the truth. Maybe a few politicians will be inspired by it. I recommend every red blooded American should watch it. One of the best movies I've seen in a long time.
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7/10
Ignore the low votes, the movie is much better than them.
MadMan-2321 July 2014
After seeing the low rating for Persecuted I didn't have much hope for the movie. Now that I've seen it, I'd say most of the low votes are from people who didn't watch it and/or are politically motivated to give low scores/poor reviews to any Christian themed movie or any movie that portrays the direction of the country in a negative light.

Without giving anything away, I will say I found myself thinking midway through the movie that 10 years or so ago you would have had to have been some type of conspiracy nut to take this seriously. Today as our Presidents follow the law less and less, various federal agencies are arming themselves to the teeth and the NSA spying on everyone domestic and foreign, it doesn't seem nearly as far fetched.
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1/10
Tolerance is the most evil, vile, despicable act on the planet. Who knew?!
twilliams7616 February 2016
Implausibly ridiculous!

Persecuted is a film that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever and its storyline could not nor would not ever happen in reality; but it has not stopped filmmaker Daniel Lusko from writing and directing the story to pander to the fears of the far political and religious right. This is yet another film made by a "Christian" filmmaker who wants to purport that he and others like him are being "persecuted" for their beliefs … seemingly forgetting what actual persecution is (I'd say ask Christ about it but He died from actual persecution).

The real kicker to the story: the "villains" of Persecuted are people merely seeking tolerance for all religion! It is an organization that seeks the approval of a revered Christian evangelist named John Luther (James Remar – Django Unchainced) to go ahead and begin worldwide operations with some sort of assistance from the US government (because that'd happen!). One seeking the vocal support of Luther is a US Senator (Bruce Davison – X-Men), who becomes downright frustrated when Luther speaks his conscious and says he cannot approve of a group that would place Christians at the same table as leaders from other world religions. Tolerance!? What are these despicable bastards thinking?!

The US Senator and some of Luther's own cohorts are so upset with his lack of cooperation, they decide to frame him for the murder of a young and innocent teenage girl! They get the girl killed but they are unable to capture/arrest Luther who proves to be a rather wily one. The damage to his name has been done, though … as everyone simply believes John Luther would just KILL this girl … just because. The world has turned against John Luther!

The entire film is a cat-n-mouse chase between Luther and those after him. As Luther has God on his side and government = bad, there aren't a whole lot of surprises as the film advances.

As the film culminates in a ridiculous stand-off, I was not able to shake the thought that the film's primary villains are people who seek tolerance and understanding of others so that there would be NO MORE religious war and leaders from all religions would respect one another enough to listen to others. TOLERANCE is the real villainy in Persecuted! Wrap your head around that one! This is frightening and I guess it is the world that some want.

Yoda got this one completely wrong: "Fear is the path to the dark side … fear leads to anger … anger leads to hate … hate leads to suffering." Who knew it all actually stems from TOLERANCE?
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Poorly Done and As Bad As It Gets
blackdoug23 July 2014
I hate to bad mouth this movie because somewhere underneath the stupidity and paranoia lies a meaningful cautionary tale and an interesting premise. Still, this thing is so bad and so nonsensical that it defeats its own purpose.

It's just all levels of terrible no matter what the intent or how earnestly they try to present the perils of a big soulless government. The title and a few lines of the film imply Christian prosecution but that subject matter is basically ignored in favor of a crazed anti-government storyline. I can't even call it a plot line because there is no coherent plot or character development.

On a side note, all I could think of watching Bruce Davison was that "Senator Kelly" has taken his mutant hating propaganda to the next level.
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1/10
A Christian preacher doesn't believe that other religions should be treated equally and is set up by the "evil" government to get him out of their way.
happybeau26 November 2014
If I could have voted less than "1", I would have. AWFUL movie. I don't know why the actors took such crappy roles, but they must have been really needing the money! Honestly, it is just a right-wing propaganda film.... I would end the review here, but it is too short. So...I guess I have no choice but to bash it some more! The lighting was awful. The camera shots were confusing. The actors were OK, but the roles themselves were just not believable. The premise of the film was actually intriguing (otherwise I wouldn't have seen it), but they totally failed. There was no attempt to provide any background for the characters and the "persecution" was on an individual who just happened to be a Christian. Not of all Christians. I see how this would have been an "inspiring" film if you were a member of CPAC....but otherwise....nah. If you believe that the Gays and Muslims are soon to be beheading Christians in their front yards anyway now, then you will probably like this "movie". Otherwise don't wast your time!
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1/10
Boring......
Jesijerni14 October 2021
This is no persecuted for Christ movie and is in no way a thriller movie i don't believe this. Persecuted i thought would be a suspense or thriller film about the tribulation but it wasn't.
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1/10
Talk about missing the mark...
Java_Joe31 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
You know what's worse than a bad movie? A bad movie with good actors who are trying desperately to tell a story.

I saw the movie and it's possibly the worst movie I've seen in my life which is sad because I like James Remar and Bruce Davison. I think they're good actors. Not the best out there but they're decent.

What I got was one of the most unrealistic, disjointed movies I've ever had the misfortune of seeing. Nothing here makes any sense. A Senator, played by Davison, wants to introduce a bill that will limit the Freedom of Speech of Christians. Not anybody else, just Christians and they will be unable to say that they know "the truth". Forget for a moment that such a thing could never happen due to the First Amendment. This is a fantasy movie after all.

But we have James Remar as an evangelist who opposes this and Bruce Davison then frames him with the rape and murder of a teenage girl in order to silence him.

What proceeds is really... incomprehensible. I tried to understand the motivations beyond just, "Christian good, non-Christian bad" but that's all I was able to get from it.

If you're a die hard right wing Christian fundamentalist then this is right up your alley. It's a good VS evil story that plays right into your paranoia. This movie was literally made for you.

If you're anybody else, I'd give this a pass.
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3/10
A Huge Disappointment
dancing15bear18 July 2014
I had expected much more of this film. I've been looking forward to it for months, having read about it in Brad Stine's e-mail newsletter. I had liked it on Facebook, saw all the trailers and news feed updates, and had high expectations. Well, I saw it this afternoon, and left feeling cheated.

I'm an evangelical Christian and a Tea Party conservative. In my mind, it is not outside the realm of possibility that it may one day become illegal to practice my faith. The Bible and the Constitution are both under attack in today's America. So I had hoped that this film would be a great dramatization about how that just might come to pass, because that's what all the hype pointed to. Well, if that's what they tried to make, they failed. Maybe my expectations on that front were too high. But it's not even a particularly good movie.

None of the characters are likable, and there is no time given for any real character development. Those who are supposed to be Christians are hardly shining examples for the faith, not what one would have expected from these producers. Brad Stine's character is particularly odious, and given that he's a Christian comedian, and listed as a co-producer, I have to wonder what he was thinking about. The "bad guys" are pretty much boilerplate. Fred Thompson plays the most sympathetic character, but his effect is diluted because his relationship with the preacher is not explained early enough. (Plus, I couldn't get his reverse-mortgage commercials out of my head!)

The music is ominous from the beginning, never seeming to stop, and the lighting is dark and stark. You can't support a nightmare scenario without first setting up normalcy. This film never does. The plot progression is confusing and portions of the action are not credible. There are some good production values, and I suppose it works on some levels as an action thriller, but I found it largely unsatisfying.

I had read some negative reviews this morning, but figured they were just examples of non-Christians who felt threatened. We've seen that with good films with a Christian message such as "Courageous," "Fireproof," and "October Baby." Turns out that this time, the secular reviewers were unfortunately right on. "Persecuted" is not what it was advertised to be. It is a huge disappointment.
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1/10
Persecution, Really?
johann_hollar30 December 2016
A movie where the big bad government tries to promote religious tolerance and the loving Christians are forced to put up with it.

Can you say delusional?

The so-called Christians who make films like this insist on being attacked by the big bad government even though they got their so- called savior Trump in the White House. They insist on refusing change and yet wonder why more liberal Christians or others dislike them.

Why they can't make films where the Christians are more like Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Martin Niemoller or Martin Luther King Jr is a mystery to me.
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5/10
A movie that started off with so much promise but I quickly lost interest in and struggled to finish
cosmo_tiger9 October 2014
"Freedom is fragile and costly and must be defended by work and by faith and even by blood." John Luther (Remar) is one of the premiere evangelists in the country and his opinions and values are widely respected. Senator Donald Harrison is championing a bill that deals with sweeping religious reform and he needs Luther's backing. When he refuses the Senator frames him for a murder and ruins his name. Now Luther must not only find who did this and why but he must also clear his name. My practice of not watching trailers before the movie has both good and bad points. The good points are that I don't know what to expect and any twists given away in the trailer are surprises to me. The bad thing about it is that I have certain expectations based solely on the poster or cover of the case. Most of the time it works in my favor. This is one exception. I was expecting a movie like Red State where there is an evil preacher. Without getting too political or religious I have to say the irony in this movie was very in your face. As for the movie itself this is yet again another movie where the idea is much better than the actual movie. This started off tense and interesting but quickly fell flat and uninspired. The best way to watch this movie is to watch the first 15 minutes and the last 5. Everything else is generic and flat. Overall, a movie that started off with so much promise but I quickly lost interest in and struggled to finish. I give this a C.
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1/10
Murder drama with a weak plot
PeaceAndLongLife4 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
(Spoiler alert) Televangelist -- I mean religious broadcaster -- John Luther opposes legislation called the "Faith and Fairness Act". Because of this, he's drugged, videotaped in bed with a woman, and framed for her murder. A U.S. Senator, members of his ministry's board, and even the Secret Service -- and possibly the President -- are behind this frame-up. Eventually, Luther is cleared because some witnesses videotaped the murder on a smartphone.

The problem with the movie is that the details of the "Faith and Fairness Act" are barely revealed. Bits and pieces of the movie suggest that it's enactment would mean big wealth and power for Luther's ministry and maybe the government, but they're very vague. More details on the Act would have provided a much better understanding of the reason for Luther's frame-up and the plotters' drive to get rid of him.

The description of the movie reads: "Persecuted depicts evangelist John Luther as the last obstacle in the way of sweeping religious reform. When a Senator frames Luther for the murder of an innocent teenage girl, an unprecedented era of persecution is unleashed. An evangelist turned fugitive, Luther's mission brings him face-to-face with the coming storm of persecution that will threaten the entire Christian community in America." The description is misleading. Without more details on the "sweeping religious reform" that would come about from enactment of the "Faith and Fairness Act", this movie is only a murder drama. No "era" or "storm" of persecution is revealed in the movie.
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9/10
truthful thriller
yunonah31 July 2014
Great thriller! Very truthful depiction of corruption from top to bottom! Great cast! I expect non-conservatives not to like it because of true story line of what is happening in the country right now, and what will happen even more in the future. This is a movie about freedom of speech and fight for it. It is also a movie about faith and how to keep and protect it even from friends. About how Judeo-Christian faith is different from all others, and for the ones who are not educated on Book of Revelation, it's not even making sense to be persecuted for what the hero is trying to protect the country from. It is about how somebody who gets out of mainstream mentality, can get in trouble looking like a criminal. About how those who are criminals can have power to discredit those who are not with them
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7/10
Ignore the trolls; moderately good movie; excellent start for new Christian genre
rking-1919 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Despite the IMDb terrorists (aka trolls) trying to influence your viewing decisions, "Persecuted" turned out to be an entertaining, moderately well-made movie deserving of your consideration, and an excellent start for a new branch in Christian movie-making: the political thriller.

John Luther is a respected religious figure with a rough beginning in life before finding God despite having a priest for a father (the estimable Fred Thompson). Luther is the front man for a ministry organization that may be performing adequately financially, perhaps faltering a bit. A "friend" of Luther's, Senator Harrison, has proposed a new bill that imposes the equivalent of the old "fairness doctrine" law from radio, consequently forcing a dilution of the gospel because, hey, there are "several paths to God," right?

Luther resists the senator's entreaties for him to woo his organization's members to support the bill. In refusing to support the senator, he becomes a target and the intrigue ensues (making clear the reason Billy Graham had round-the-clock assistants).

The great thing about this type of movie, though, is that it is a story, not a sermon. You may find some continuity errors and some plot annoyances -- my favorite is pressing the "down" elevator button to go from the first floor to the fifth. But at least for me, they did not make the film unenjoyable, although in full honesty I was not deeply moved at the end.

My point with the warnings is to set expectations. If you enjoy intrigue movies, I recommend it and think you will enjoy seeing it. The trolls are desperate and their early voting has as of this writing caused the laughable score, but if you look at the statistical breakdown of the votes you can see the mountains of irrational, baseless "1" voting. Get real, trolls.

Hollywood admittedly has years, hundreds of movies, and millions of dollars' worth more experience. But they also produce objectionable content, as well as holding viewpoints antithetical to my own. This is movie #1 of this Christian sub-type (that I'm aware of, anyway). I look at it this way: I enjoyed the film; AND, it is going to get better as more releases of this type come out.

If the trolls scare you, hold off and let them persecute "Persecuted." But if you have your own mind, don't let them make it up for you; you'll have fun and be glad you went.

(I have no connection in any way to the movie or its cast/crew/finances.)
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5/10
Another Christian film that hits the ground running
jacobburbidge19 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
It's a shame that Persecuted has so little going for it while so much at the same time. I didn't really have any expectations for this film due to its low rating and it is by no means as bad as some people say it is. However, even looking at it from a Christian standpoint, Persecuted has little making it anything above average.

James Remar does the best he can with this script as does most of the cast. He does convey a broken man on the run for his life reasonably well, however it's the script that brings him down. There's nothing particularly bad about the script, but there's nothing special to be said about it.

I can say good about some particular scenes. Moments like Luther's dad being killed in this awesome long take, the ending where Luther has to make a decision whether to kill the FBI agent to save the cop lady. There are things that underpin Persecuted and try to lift it up, but ultimately not much can get it out of the mud that it was written in.

From a Christian standpoint, Persecuted comes off as having some sort of victim mentality. Yes Christians are persecuted across the world, yes they are sometimes persecuted in the West (I have seen it myself), but its never good to wallow in that victimhood and unfortunately it creates an outlook on this movie that makes me think I've got some kind of target on my back. If it's not told in an interesting and compelling way, I can't really feel for it.

Can I say there's nothing to like about this film? Not exactly. I'm certain there is something here for anyone, Christian or not. But not much sticks with me in a film that feels like the whole world is out to get it.
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