La profecía bíblica del Armagedón comienza cuando el Arrebatamiento remueve instantáneamente a todos los creyentes en Cristo de la tierra. Un reportero que queda atrás se entera de que el An... Leer todoLa profecía bíblica del Armagedón comienza cuando el Arrebatamiento remueve instantáneamente a todos los creyentes en Cristo de la tierra. Un reportero que queda atrás se entera de que el Anticristo pronto tomará el poder.La profecía bíblica del Armagedón comienza cuando el Arrebatamiento remueve instantáneamente a todos los creyentes en Cristo de la tierra. Un reportero que queda atrás se entera de que el Anticristo pronto tomará el poder.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 3 nominaciones en total
- Bruce Barnes
- (as Clarence Gilyard)
- Alan Tompkins
- (as Philip Akon)
Opiniones destacadas
But there are other vapid movies out there too. What makes this (and 'Omega Code') so fascinating is that they were not intended to entertain, even to enlighten, but to proselytize. And some day soon this crowd will cease to be so amateurish -- down the street from me is Pat Roberstson's film 'university' with a virtual endowment of billions and the intent of being professionally slick. What then?
It is an interesting question. As it stands now, we have films that are made for profit. Most of these pander in some way. Then we have films that are made as art. Some of these pander as well. And we have propaganda films of various sorts whose purpose is purely to convince/convert/affirm. Of these, the latter are the only truly pornographic.
I think that as religious films become better and more common (they will), they become fair game for satire. Imagine a Scream about the apocalypse cults. Then instead of massive protests against a respectful film like 'Last Temptation' (shots were fired here!) what will we get? Imagine class war.
The film and the books behind it aren't very biblically accurate in any case. The rapture metaphor comes from Darius, who incidentally rebuilt the temple the first time, and invented modern Judaism as an experiment. Currency has been unified since then, 2500 years with only the names kept nationally. That's what is referenced in the B. Darius also revived Zoroastrianism which mixed with later Judaism to produce the essenism of John which Jesus adopted.
This in fact is not a film with Christian theology at all. They even fumbled that.
To have a good movie, you need to have a well-written screenplay. Left Behind fell woefully short on this. For one thing, it radically deviates from the book. Sometimes this is done to condense a 400-page novel down to a two-hour film, but in this film I saw changes that made no sense whatsoever.
Another thing, there is zero character development. When characters in the story get saved (I won't say who), the book makes it clear that it's a long, soul-searching process. In the film it's quick and artificial. The book is written decently enough where people like Rayford Steele, Buck Williams and Hattie Durham seem real, but in the movie scenarios are consistently given the quick treatment without anything substantial. In another scene where one character gets angry about being left behind (again, I won't say who), it seems artificial.
I realize as a Christian it's unedifying for me to say I disliked this film, but I can't in a good conscience recommend a film that I feel was horribly done. Perhaps it would've been better to make the first book into 2-3 films. Either way, Christians need to realize that to be taken seriously as filmmakers, we need to start by putting together a film in a quality way. I realize a lot of effort probably went into Left Behind, but that's the way I see it.
The effects aren't great. They are on par with a USA original movie or a lower budget TV movie. But hey, Star Trek (Original) is much better than Next Generation so effects don't really matter unless all you want is eye candy (i.e. people that would never ever read a book). My wife read the books and begged me to watch the movie. I was raised a Christian but I am not really sure what I believe now, and I thought it was an ok movie. At least a 5 or 6. All of you Christians and Christian haters are no different. You are both prejudice against the other group. Grow up! I thought the story was a little better than average (6.5) and the acting & producing was average (4.5). I feel the story is the most important thing so I gave the movie a 6.0.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaReleased directly to video in 2000, copies of the film came bundled with a free pass to watch the film in theaters when it was later given limited release in early 2001.
- ErroresThe flags flying outside the real United Nations building are of the member nations. The ones shown are of Canada's provinces.
- Citas
[Watching TV]
Chloe Steele: Turn that up.
Raymie Steele: Mom said to turn it down.
Chloe Steele: You always do what you're told?
Raymie Steele: Yeah, you should try it sometime.
- Créditos curiososThe Producers wish to thank: Karll Goodman (who inadvertently vanished during editing)
- ConexionesEdited into Left Behind: Like Son (2013)
Selecciones populares
- How long is Left Behind: The Movie?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Left Behind: The Movie
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 4,000,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 4,224,065
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 2,158,780
- 4 feb 2001
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 4,224,065
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 40 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido