Believe Me (FILM REVIEW)
Believe Me
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Collegians Form Fake Charity to Fleece Gullible Christians in
Faith-Based Morality Play
Even though
I was raised in the church and attended services religiously as a child, I was simultaneously
warned by my skeptical grandmother that sometimes, “The closer supposedly to
Christ, the further from God.” That sage old saying came to mind while watching
Believe Me, an intriguing modern morality play written and directed by Will
Bakke (Beware of Christians).
The
story revolves around the ethical issues confronting Sam Atwell (Alex Russell),
a law school-bound college senior, or at least he thought. Trouble is, his
parents suddenly can’t afford to pay his final semester’s tuition which means
he won’t be able to graduate on time or continue his education the following
fall.
This is the
predicament we find the handsome upperclassman facing at the picture’s point of
departure, a time when he’d really rather be hazing pledges to his fraternity
and hooking up with cute coeds he meets at keg parties. And after a futile
visit with the unsympathetic school dean (Nick Offerman), Sam knows he simply
has to come up with the $9,000 somehow, if he wants to get that degree in June.
Thinking outside the
box, he concocts an elaborate scheme to separate gullible Evangelicals from
their cash, figuring them to be a soft touch. So, he enlists the assistance of
a few of his frat brothers in the nefarious endeavor, namely, Pierce (Miles
Fisher), Tyler (Sinqua Wells) and Baker (Max Adler).
The plan is to
prevail upon Born Again congregations by posing as a Christian charity assisting
needy children in Africa. In due course, Sam
proves to be such a good pitchman that the money starts flooding in.
That development is
not lost on Ken (Christopher McDonald), a faith-oriented entrepreneur who
offers to help take the boys’ burgeoning business to the next level. Soon, as the
God Squad, they’re on the prayer meeting tent circuit and selling a Christian clothing
line called Cross Dressing that includes “F-Satan” t-shirts and the like.
However, the sinful scheme
begins to unravel when they have no place to send a kid (Chester Rushing) who
wants to do missionary work with them in Lesotho. And the moment of truth
arrives when the pretty tour coordinator (Johanna Braddy) Sam’s just started
dating is given proof by a colleague (Zachary Knighton) that her new beau is a
big fraud.
At this juncture, the
jig is essentially up, whether or not the arrogant co-conspirators are too
blinded by a combination of cynicism and greed to confess to the crime. After
all, they’d taken such glee in exploiting foolish followers of Christ by
strategically faking everything from appropriately-pious poses to the right religious
buzzwords.
A thought-provoking, faith-based parable
asking whether it’s ever too late to make a second impression, especially on God.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Rated PG-13
for profanity
Running time: 93
minutes
Studio: Riot Studios
/ Lascaux Films
Distributor: Headline
Features / Gravitas Features
To see a trailer for Believe
Me, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=emdGSSHujyo
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