Calling a faith-based launch “preachy” might appear redundant, since these productions are designed as autos to evangelize. However, even inside its religious area of interest, Alex Kendrick’s “Overcomer” shocks for being much more oppressively loquacious than a few of its many big-screen cousins.
If each line of stale dialogue landed like a hammer to the top, audiences would stroll out victims of blunt-force trauma.
Kendrick, who co-wrote this with brother and perennial collaborator Stephen Kendrick, directs himself as John Harrison, a beloved basketball coach and historical past instructor at a Christian highschool in small-town America. Life’s idyllic till his self-image crumbles after the native plant closes, forcing hundreds of blue-collar employees to maneuver elsewhere with their households. Lacking gamers, John is reassigned to teach the cross-country crew, composed of 1 athlete with bronchial asthma: orphaned African American teen Hannah Scott (newcomer Aryn Wright-Thompson).
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Bland John (who appears unable to cry given Kendrick’s uncomfortable efficiency when pouting) sulks over the lack of his skilled identification. But upon assembly Thomas (Cameron Arnett), a bed-ridden African American man with a lot of regrets however who’s discovered Christ, John’s priorities shift. Their friendship yields such an abhorrently predictable twist it doesn’t even advantage blatantly spoiling it. At college, John, his spouse, and the principal rally collectively not solely to assist Hannah succeed at working, but in addition to information her towards assembly somebody from her previous and to embrace faith wholeheartedly.
Simply put, “Overcomer” tells the story of a younger lady’s indoctrination into Christianity by her religious instructors, who bypass her grandmother’s authority with a view to do what they assume is greatest for her, beneath the pretense of an athletic competitors. Heralded by overly victorious music courtesy of Paul Mills (“Indivisible”), Hannah — as soon as a thief and the daughter of drug addicts (severely?) — walks right into a room late within the movie to announce, “I am a child of God.” The transformation has been accomplished.
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For a second, Hannah’s grandmother (Denise Armstrong) comes throughout as the one individual with some sense. She complains about John’s overstepping, however her resolve vanishes shortly when forgiveness comes into play after her arm is twisted by Hannah’s lecturers.
Most of the plot and all the exposition unfolds in prolonged conversations about God. Scene after rambling scene, everybody in entrance of the digicam spells out the script’s messaging with verbose, bold-faced statements that do nothing to enhance the general high quality of the solid’s efforts. Overacting runs rampant. Tedium builds up a lot that the ultimate race, the ending of which we are able to all predict, virtually ignites pleasure, however then even that sequence is slathered with sanctimonious voiceover. What’s by no means seen, by way of the monologues and hackneyed one-on-one chats, is a want to make use of lighting past flat luminosity. Visual supply matches the insipidness of the fabric.
Unexpected positives embrace a few periods of man-to-man openness between John and Thomas (Arnett is the higher actor of the 2 when not drowning in pathos) to debate private failures. That macho vulnerability feels refreshing even right here and extends to how John’s sons behave. Sure, these children have in all probability purchased right into a pro-life and homophobic agenda, however at the least they’re encouraging of others and superficially nice — as long as these they assist have potential to affix their flock.
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The meat of the film’s argument arises from the concept what you do on this…