When an inner city pastor is re-assigned to a rural church, he and his family must find away to adapt to their new, unfamiliar environment.When an inner city pastor is re-assigned to a rural church, he and his family must find away to adapt to their new, unfamiliar environment.When an inner city pastor is re-assigned to a rural church, he and his family must find away to adapt to their new, unfamiliar environment.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Katherine Kirkpatrick
- Norma
- (as Sage Kirkpatrick)
Featured reviews
A pastor from California that sounds like he is from New York, and a small town in Arizona with fake southern accents, a half dressed woman throwing herself at every man she sees? Really? As a true southerner and a Christian, I am offended by this entire production. I can appreciate the attempt to bring this distant family back together, but other than the fact that the main character is a preacher going to a new church, a true message falls short. The actors had potential. The story line had potential. The editing and camera work we're good quality, but overall, unfortunately, the potential message was not genuinely portrayed.
My first clue that this was amateur hour were the credits. I remember when I first tried my hand at editing a home movie. That's what the credits looked like. Someone getting excited that they could have the credits on the screen get hidden by the characters in the foreground. Then gee look I can have my main character in the background with the titles in the front of them then do the same cheesy effect wit another character in front of them. Now on to the acting... You know what I'm as bored as I was watching stiff acting and bad dialogue mixed in with a bit of overacting. Don't forget the corny soundtrack. Constantly beating you over the head to stress things. Likely in order that since you don't know what to make of the movie the music can guide you along.
What is wrong with a sweet family movie that is not a Hollywood production? If it espouses family values, doesn't have any cuss words, can provide an opportunity for a family to talk about change and faith, I think it's worth a shot. Haters, step aside. Geek out moment: It also has two actors from Stormship Troopers I never thought would do a family movie.
The plot dragged on and on. The dialogue seems to be designed to insult the Southern drawl in addition to being shallow. Uncle Joey and wife in Los Angeles sounded like New Jersey transplants. The characters were stereotypes. There was some sexual tension between the half-naked blonde and any of the men, and her attire and behavior should have earned a PG-13 rating. Halfway through the movie and there was only one episode of Pastor Randy doing any ministering.
Moderately amusing small town jokes don't quite sustain this light fluff about a pastor and family moving from LA to small town Arizona. All the quirks of the little town and it's people are just about okay. One funny part is how they start speaking like them.
The cast is okay considering they usually play the opposite of a preacher like the gruff voice Patrick Muldoon and the usually sexy Dina Meyer.
The inevitable conclusion takes a bit too much time to get to.
OK watch.
The cast is okay considering they usually play the opposite of a preacher like the gruff voice Patrick Muldoon and the usually sexy Dina Meyer.
The inevitable conclusion takes a bit too much time to get to.
OK watch.
Did you know
- TriviaMarch 13, 2015: The screenplay for "Fishes 'n Loaves" has been awarded the "Faith Friendly" Seal of Approval from the Dove Foundation as "Suitable for all ages," earning 5 out of 5 DOVES rating.
- GoofsWhen the three kids were having lunch outdoors, the "ice" in their glasses sank to the bottom and there was no condensation on the glasses.
- How long is Fishes 'n Loaves: Heaven Sent?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 42 minutes
- Color
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By what name was Fishes 'n Loaves: Heaven Sent (2016) officially released in India in English?
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