Guests at The Dream Motel find themselves face to face with their past, their future, and their present. All things are possible for the guests of The Dream Motel.Guests at The Dream Motel find themselves face to face with their past, their future, and their present. All things are possible for the guests of The Dream Motel.Guests at The Dream Motel find themselves face to face with their past, their future, and their present. All things are possible for the guests of The Dream Motel.
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I enjoyed series. Though I do believe it was a bit confusing . I do not understand how the second season was so different from the first season. Both seasons were able to get across their point. The lessons were something to think over. The power of choice. I like that it showed the love of God but also the consequences of choice good or bad. I like that it helps you to think about choices you make. Also, how those choices effect those around you and the future. Makes you think the people in your life, they may have far greater purpose, then we can ever see even those who frustrate us. I would recommend this, but keep in mind not a Hollywood production or budget.
This is the worst television I've seen, and that includes every training video forced on me by my employers. At least "Reefer Madness" made me laugh once or twice.
Bad directing. Bad acting. Bad pacing. Bad dialogue. Bad writing all around.
In the first 5 minutes of the pilot episode, they mangled several commonly used phrases, which is why their dialogue sounds stilted and forced. It's "well and good," not "good and well."
They use fear to motivate the "guests" instead of guiding them towards empathy and compassion. If you don't get with the program, bad things will happen to you. It should be about good being done rather than how bad it would otherwise be, even though that bad has zero to do with a guest's actual issue.
I won't give details of bad plot lines (I couldn't stomach watching long enough to get to the end of even one episode,) but if you're gullible enough to watch this because the premise had promise you'll see what I mean pretty quickly.
Watch reruns of "Seventh Heaven" or "Touched by an Angel" if you need a religious programming fix. There's a reason those shows were renewed multiple times. This show needs to die a quick, merciful death.
Bad directing. Bad acting. Bad pacing. Bad dialogue. Bad writing all around.
In the first 5 minutes of the pilot episode, they mangled several commonly used phrases, which is why their dialogue sounds stilted and forced. It's "well and good," not "good and well."
They use fear to motivate the "guests" instead of guiding them towards empathy and compassion. If you don't get with the program, bad things will happen to you. It should be about good being done rather than how bad it would otherwise be, even though that bad has zero to do with a guest's actual issue.
I won't give details of bad plot lines (I couldn't stomach watching long enough to get to the end of even one episode,) but if you're gullible enough to watch this because the premise had promise you'll see what I mean pretty quickly.
Watch reruns of "Seventh Heaven" or "Touched by an Angel" if you need a religious programming fix. There's a reason those shows were renewed multiple times. This show needs to die a quick, merciful death.
While this series isn't theologically heavy, I find it enjoyable nonetheless.
The Dream Motel is built on a streamlined model of the Canadian television series
Twice In A Lifetime. That was the series Al Waxman played an angel judge and
certain folks on the point of death are sent back in time to make a life altering
decision.
Here people check into this motel run by Jeff Armstrong playing Jesse Chris and when they pop off to sleep are sent back in time to also change their fate.
A little more formal theology is with this one and a half hour doesn't allow for more character development.
I don't think this one will make it off religious television.
Here people check into this motel run by Jeff Armstrong playing Jesse Chris and when they pop off to sleep are sent back in time to also change their fate.
A little more formal theology is with this one and a half hour doesn't allow for more character development.
I don't think this one will make it off religious television.
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