Award winning filmmaker, Ondi Timoner, follows four families as they leave an abusive church in South Carolina and realize they have been in a cult. The film documents them as they enter Wel... Read allAward winning filmmaker, Ondi Timoner, follows four families as they leave an abusive church in South Carolina and realize they have been in a cult. The film documents them as they enter Wellspring, the only accredited, live-in cult treatment facility in the world, where they lea... Read allAward winning filmmaker, Ondi Timoner, follows four families as they leave an abusive church in South Carolina and realize they have been in a cult. The film documents them as they enter Wellspring, the only accredited, live-in cult treatment facility in the world, where they learn the true extent of the brainwashing they have all experienced. Eventually they return h... Read all
- Awards
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- Self
- (archive footage)
- Self
- (as Diedra Lee Dwyer)
- Self
- (archive footage)
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Featured reviews
"Skeptical viewers may wonder how such outwardly conventional and otherwise unremarkable people could allow themselves to be dominated by one man -- particularly someone like Melz, who comes off as a stern control freak on camera. Lifton and other experts remind that the very nature of belief, plus the power of a particularly strong leader, makes the mind vulnerable to cult-like obedience. It's this lesson, as well as the vivid recording of actual events, that makes "Join Us" an unusually useful doc."
Also, check out this review from Docuchick:
"Ondi Timoner hit the doc scene like Layne Staley hit the heroin a long painful road that appeared fast and out of nowhere.
Timoner's seven-year-in-the-making-rock-doc DIG! won the Sundance Grand Jury Prize a few years ago and put her on the "scene" and this time around she's taken her study of Anton Newcombe's brainwashing abilities (on himself and those around him) and harnessed some of those themes in her new documentary film called JOIN US.
JOIN US reveals America is the world's breeding ground for Cults and religious fanatics, and JOIN US is a documentary that follows a group of individuals trying to separate themselves from this troubled reality. Stirring, emotional, and raw JOIN US peeks inside the controversial and "hush-hush" world of religion and cults."
It's an interesting movie about how easily some minds can be controlled and how some churches could be considered cults but it's definitely not totally convincing, but it does raise some interesting questions.
The docu revolves around a small town cult called Rock mountain Church. Their followers maybe a few but the crimes committed by the leader is not.
It's a great subject for a documentary. The problem is the direction was not even sub par. It is was outright horrendous.
At times the movie felt like a bullet point presentation of the misdeeds of the church. And at other times it felt like the director was trying to sell how great "Wellspring Retreat and Resource Center" is than trying to tell the story of the survivors. In reality the "Wellspring Retreat and Resource Center" is also accused of using the same techniques that some of the cults use.
The docu had many great interviews but they were all cluttered together and failed to tell a comprehensive story.
I hope some better directors make a movie on the same subject just to give justice to the harrowing experience of the victims of this cult.
Michael,
While I found your response to be very well thought out and detailed, I think that you miss the mark on your analysis of how the parents could allow their children to undergo unnecessary beatings and other forms of abuse, with the excuse that they were simply following orders from their cult leader. You, in the end, feel that the blame lies squarely on these parents for allowing such acts to occur. You feel that there is no excuse for their failure to take action, or better yet, their inability to disobey an immoral order.
The power of the mind is incredible Michael. Consider the men and women who blow themselves up in order to become martyrs, as well as followers of terrorists who through following orders, commit the most atrocious of acts to their fellow human beings. These people have families and loved ones too, but yet they are willing to give all that up in the name of the faith. This faith, needless to say, has been acquired by merely believing the opinions of a few. The followers of Pastor Melz are in the same way long-time believers of his word, to the point of self-sacrifice. Also, don't forget that people like Pastor Melz often seek out the vulnerable and somewhat "save them" thereby earning their unquestionable trust and faith.
Mind control is real Michael, and so long as another human being is subjected to it, that particular person loses the power to think rationally, and can then not be judged in a rational manner, as you do. However, this isn't to say that there is no hope. Information is power. It is exposure to the outside world that gives a wake-up call to Pastor Melz's followers, who in turn begin to question his practices, and for the first time in a long time, think rationally. For many such people, it takes certain triggers or flags before they can "snap out of it".
In conclusion, while I find that you have certain valid points, I think you miss the mark when you deem it bogus that such events could actually take place.
Your thoughts......
Thanks for your informative and interesting post anyway,
Cheers,
Emily
P.S. I am currently working with Ondi, at Interloper Films.
Did you know
- Quotes
Deborah Melz: Whippings... are in order.
- ConnectionsReferences 1, rue Sésame (1969)
- SoundtracksDucks on the Pond
performed by Liz Shaw & Lynn Shaw
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- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
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