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Graham Greene, John Lewis, and Sherry Morris in Out of the Darkness (2016)

User reviews

Out of the Darkness

3 reviews
3/10

Aside from Greene's involvement, almost completely pedestrian...

Low-budget, religious-themed drama, expanded from the short film "Redeeming Daniel", concerns obstinate, quick-tempered Eli, a young man returned home to his family after a stint in the service who immediately butts heads with his rancher father. Since he's also at odds with both his mother and his wife--who won't allow him to tuck their four-year old into bed anymore--Eli gets drunk and drives off into the mountains, where he has a religious epiphany following an accident in his truck. Writer-director Shawn Justice apparently had a need to make this film, and he does have a message of faith to get across if you wait him out, but he displays no visible talent handling his actors (his dialogue is negligible as well). As a grizzled, mellow fellow camping out in the woods with his dog, Graham Greene arrives an hour into the proceedings and manages to give the production a little polish, but lead actor Adam Elliott Davis is embarrassing standing in a leaf-storm howling up at the sky. A filmmaker with some cinematic savvy might have given us more sides to Eli instead of just this stubborn cuss who pushes everyone away, but Justice is too determined to point out the obvious--that giving ourselves to God strengthens us--and forgets that movies are meant to entertain as well as enlighten. *1/2 from ****
  • moonspinner55
  • Mar 28, 2017
  • Permalink
3/10

The Magic Forest

Young Adam Elliott Davis is a rather shiftless sort of man whose parents and girlfriend don't think he's realizing his full potential. One night he drives off an embankment Into what I can only call a magic forest.

It's quite a place filled with all kinds of illusions and characters representing good and evil battling for his soul. It's all quite silly as well.

Supposedly this is based on the story of Jonah and the whale. But I don't think Jonah would have minded the forest. Being undigested in a whale's is its own brand of torture.

Anyway this cheaply shot film is too dull in spots to be entertaining or delver its message successfully.
  • bkoganbing
  • Jun 19, 2020
  • Permalink
2/10

Unfinished Business

  • oakiwan
  • May 6, 2017
  • Permalink

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