VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,3/10
41.347
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un uomo in lutto riceve un misterioso invito personale a incontrarsi con Dio in un luogo chiamato "La baracca".Un uomo in lutto riceve un misterioso invito personale a incontrarsi con Dio in un luogo chiamato "La baracca".Un uomo in lutto riceve un misterioso invito personale a incontrarsi con Dio in un luogo chiamato "La baracca".
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 3 vittorie e 2 candidature totali
Amélie Eve
- Missy Phillips
- (as Amelie Eve)
Recensioni in evidenza
I'm not really a huge fan of most "Christian" movies. I say that as a Christian and as a pastor. But for the most part I find them formulaic to the point of boring and usually badly (even horrendously) acted. And usually the more seriously they try to take themselves the worse they end up being. So I confess that I had very low expectations of "The Shack." I watched it because my wife wanted to watch it. She had read the book (I've not bothered with it either - for no particular reason) and wanted to see the film adaptation. Well, I watched it with her and I was pleasantly surprised. All in all, I thought this was a pretty well done movie and an interesting story.
First, I thought that Sam Worthington did a great job playing Mackenzie. Abused - and watching his mother be abused - by an alcoholic father as a child, Mackenzie grew up and managed to become a pretty good dad to his three children. Then tragedy strikes. On a camping trip his youngest daughter is kidnapped and murdered (and presumably raped - this was never said but was certainly implied.) Mackenzie and his family are devastated, of course. Mackenzie becomes depressed and angry. He had had a distant faith before all this happened, but it was destroyed by the events. Then one day he receives an invitation to go to the shack where his murdered daughter was taken by the kidnapper. Not knowing what - or who - to expect there, he goes, and begins a journey of discovery and healing when he finds himself in the company of God - the Holy Trinity. Father, Son and Holy Spirit are all there.
It's an interesting portrayal of God. The Father (Papa, as God is known in Mackenzie's family) was played by Octavia Spencer. Apparently this was criticized by some who couldn't stand the idea of God being black. Or a woman. Or a black woman. Whatever. The point was that this was an image of God Mackenzie would be comfortable with. And God was very comfortable - admittedly almost too comfortable at times, although in the end Mackenzie is forced to confront some painful things before his healing can start. Certainly, though, it's a very "touchy, feely" portrayal of God that some might be uncomfortable with. I thought, though, that it provided an image of a very tender God who stands with his children and never abandons them - even though they sometimes feel abandoned. And it raises a lot of the difficult theological questions that all of us grapple with. The presence and the power of evil; God's role in evil; issues of judgement and forgiveness. They're all there. I wouldn't say that it's an entirely orthodox portrayal of God by any means. And, yes, to acknowledge one of the main theological criticisms the story received from a lot of Christian circles - it does have a universalist tinge to it for those who are offended by that theological viewpoint. (I would say that I'm not a universalist - because being a universalist is itself being judgemental - but I'm open to the possibility that God might be - so that didn't really bother me.) I did like the fact that the Father in one scene switches from a black woman to an older male for scenes where Mackenzie needed a real "father figure." I enjoyed the playfulness of Jesus (Avraham Aviv Alush) and the gentleness of Sarayu (the Holy Spirit.) It was really a very warm and comforting image of God.
It's not going to be to everyone's taste - and, being an overtly Christian, faith-based movie - it's going to push a lot of people to the extreme ends of the "loved it/hated it" spectrum. I'm not sure I got as far as loving it - but I did enjoy it very much. (8/10)
First, I thought that Sam Worthington did a great job playing Mackenzie. Abused - and watching his mother be abused - by an alcoholic father as a child, Mackenzie grew up and managed to become a pretty good dad to his three children. Then tragedy strikes. On a camping trip his youngest daughter is kidnapped and murdered (and presumably raped - this was never said but was certainly implied.) Mackenzie and his family are devastated, of course. Mackenzie becomes depressed and angry. He had had a distant faith before all this happened, but it was destroyed by the events. Then one day he receives an invitation to go to the shack where his murdered daughter was taken by the kidnapper. Not knowing what - or who - to expect there, he goes, and begins a journey of discovery and healing when he finds himself in the company of God - the Holy Trinity. Father, Son and Holy Spirit are all there.
It's an interesting portrayal of God. The Father (Papa, as God is known in Mackenzie's family) was played by Octavia Spencer. Apparently this was criticized by some who couldn't stand the idea of God being black. Or a woman. Or a black woman. Whatever. The point was that this was an image of God Mackenzie would be comfortable with. And God was very comfortable - admittedly almost too comfortable at times, although in the end Mackenzie is forced to confront some painful things before his healing can start. Certainly, though, it's a very "touchy, feely" portrayal of God that some might be uncomfortable with. I thought, though, that it provided an image of a very tender God who stands with his children and never abandons them - even though they sometimes feel abandoned. And it raises a lot of the difficult theological questions that all of us grapple with. The presence and the power of evil; God's role in evil; issues of judgement and forgiveness. They're all there. I wouldn't say that it's an entirely orthodox portrayal of God by any means. And, yes, to acknowledge one of the main theological criticisms the story received from a lot of Christian circles - it does have a universalist tinge to it for those who are offended by that theological viewpoint. (I would say that I'm not a universalist - because being a universalist is itself being judgemental - but I'm open to the possibility that God might be - so that didn't really bother me.) I did like the fact that the Father in one scene switches from a black woman to an older male for scenes where Mackenzie needed a real "father figure." I enjoyed the playfulness of Jesus (Avraham Aviv Alush) and the gentleness of Sarayu (the Holy Spirit.) It was really a very warm and comforting image of God.
It's not going to be to everyone's taste - and, being an overtly Christian, faith-based movie - it's going to push a lot of people to the extreme ends of the "loved it/hated it" spectrum. I'm not sure I got as far as loving it - but I did enjoy it very much. (8/10)
This film tells the story of a man who loses his young daughter during a camping trip. He grieves for the loss of his daughter, and his process is eased by a trip to the heavenly shack.
Grief is a difficult process to deal with, especially after such a traumatic experience. The heavenly intervention is a beautiful process. The process of healing is universal, and it's beautifully portrayed in this film. Through various reflections and exercises, the beauty of life, forgiveness and the need to move on are conveyed.
It drove me to tears many times because it is very touching. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Grief is a difficult process to deal with, especially after such a traumatic experience. The heavenly intervention is a beautiful process. The process of healing is universal, and it's beautifully portrayed in this film. Through various reflections and exercises, the beauty of life, forgiveness and the need to move on are conveyed.
It drove me to tears many times because it is very touching. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Why do a lot of modern male actors have voices like they've been stabbed through the voice box ???.
Speak up men !!!, so we can understand you, it's not cool to whisper !!!!.
Mack Phillips is happily married with three children. When a family tragedy shatters their carefree existence, Mack becomes bitter and depressed and the family starts to drift apart. Out of the blue he receives an invitation to return to where the tragedy took place, a deserted cabin known simply as The Shack. Thing is - the invitation is from God...
Well-intended but clumsy and long-winded. The aim was to portray the Christian message in a relatable way, especially how it pertains to tragedy and grief. However, it takes forever to get there, and does so in a folksy, licence-taking, sermonising sort of way.
Part of the problem is that the producers hedged their bets in terms of who their target audience was, trying to make it for Christian and non-Christian audiences alike and thus diluting the effect on both parties. Christians will probably find the movie overly simplistic and dumbed-down, and even inaccurate in some respects. Non-Christians, and movie-goers in general, will be put off by the overly long set-up before the important stuff, and then then how that is also drawn out. In addition, the message delivery is not too subtle, so the feeling that you're being lectured to may be off-putting to some too.
It's not all bad though. There are some good messages along the way and the end ties things together reasonably well. That would require watchers to make it to the end though...
Well-intended but clumsy and long-winded. The aim was to portray the Christian message in a relatable way, especially how it pertains to tragedy and grief. However, it takes forever to get there, and does so in a folksy, licence-taking, sermonising sort of way.
Part of the problem is that the producers hedged their bets in terms of who their target audience was, trying to make it for Christian and non-Christian audiences alike and thus diluting the effect on both parties. Christians will probably find the movie overly simplistic and dumbed-down, and even inaccurate in some respects. Non-Christians, and movie-goers in general, will be put off by the overly long set-up before the important stuff, and then then how that is also drawn out. In addition, the message delivery is not too subtle, so the feeling that you're being lectured to may be off-putting to some too.
It's not all bad though. There are some good messages along the way and the end ties things together reasonably well. That would require watchers to make it to the end though...
Greetings from Lithuania.
So the best thing i can say about "The Shack" (2017) after somehow managing to see it - it is not a terrible movie, but it isn't a good movie either but the worst thing about it - its just boring as hell. I do not use this word often when watching movies, but "boring" perfectly describes "The Shack" - script was so uninvolving, so simple, mediocre at its best and lacking anything of what makes movies involving - its just straight our boring.
Performances weren't particular good either, but they weren't bad neither - everyone did what they could with the material they have had, nothing more and nothing less.
Overall, "The Shack" is a lame and very predictable "spirituous" movie. It is not a terrible one, but it lacks everything of what makes movies involving in a first place - staring from good script and solid directing - this one doesn't had it and this movie dragged as hell for me. Can't recommend it.
So the best thing i can say about "The Shack" (2017) after somehow managing to see it - it is not a terrible movie, but it isn't a good movie either but the worst thing about it - its just boring as hell. I do not use this word often when watching movies, but "boring" perfectly describes "The Shack" - script was so uninvolving, so simple, mediocre at its best and lacking anything of what makes movies involving - its just straight our boring.
Performances weren't particular good either, but they weren't bad neither - everyone did what they could with the material they have had, nothing more and nothing less.
Overall, "The Shack" is a lame and very predictable "spirituous" movie. It is not a terrible one, but it lacks everything of what makes movies involving in a first place - staring from good script and solid directing - this one doesn't had it and this movie dragged as hell for me. Can't recommend it.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIn 2005, William P. Young was working three jobs and living in a 900-square-foot apartment with his wife and four of his six children after losing his home to bankruptcy. He started writing a novel during his daily 40-minute train commute, hoping to express his feelings about God to his children, since he couldn't afford to buy holiday gifts. He expected his family and maybe a few friends to read it. The book sold over 20 million copies.
- BlooperIt's hard to imagine that FBI agents would invite a grieving parent to the scene where his abducted daughter was assaulted or killed, leaving behind her blood and dress.
- Colonne sonoreNothing But The Blood of Jesus
Traditional
Performed by the ScreenMusic Choir
Courtesy of the Chicago Music Library
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 20.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 57.386.418 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 16.172.119 USD
- 5 mar 2017
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 96.942.115 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore 12 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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