Saturday, March 21, 2009

Knowing - movie review

We usually check the movie reviews on Plugged In (www.pluggedinonline.com) before we rent or watch movies. I did NOT read the review for Knowing before we went to see it tonight, but I can tell you that even if I had, I completely disagree with the way they've reviewed this movie. I've posted before that we only go to one or two movies a year because it's so expensive. The only thing Sarah wanted for her birthday was a night at the movies alone with me so she and I went tonight and saw Knowing.

I've always been a huge Nicolas Cage fan, but unfortunately I was hugely let down by this film. In case any of you were considering watching it - with or without your teenagers - I thought you might find some advance warning helpful. First off, I would positively, absolutely NOT take children to this movie. Honestly, if I had it to do over again, I wouldn't take a young teen either and I told Sarah this after the movie.

For starters, since the movie is PG-13, the previews before the movie were absolutely horrible. I found them completely unacceptable. The first preview that came on started showing these girls in a fraternity and it honestly looked like they were having a good time, they were joking around, and even though there was inappropriate behavior (boys and girls having sex at a party, boy who cheated on his girlfriend, etc.), I was totally not expecting what came next. The joke got out of hand, and it actually showed the boy killing another girl with a tire iron. It was so unexpected and horrible that I told Sarah we might have to leave if this is what was to come. To her credit, when I started to tell her, she already had her ears covered and her head lowered. She was not watching any of it. Now this was just in the PREVIEWS!!!

I think the next preview was the one that had a horribly violent movie about a bunch of robots who are killing everyone Earth. It was very violent. I told Sarah just to keep her head down the whole time during the previews. It's good because the next preview had two girls KISSING... It just got worse and worse. These previews are approved for ALL AUDIENCES (meaning children, too). I'm seriously going to be checking into who rates previews and doing some articles about that on my website when I return from Washington DC. I couldn't believe the content of the previews.

So on to the movie... In a nutshell, this is the worst example of New Ageism combined with UFO-logy and "Christianity" that I've ever seen. I put Christianity in quotes because it is so convoluted that there is no Christianity left in it. Basically, the premise of the movie is that this little girl knows when the end of the world is coming - the exact date. Not only that, but she writes numbers on a paper in 1959 that predict ever major disaster that happens until 2009. She couldn't finish writing her numbers on the paper before the teacher snatches the paper away so the little girl finds a closet and scratches more numbers into a door there until her fingers are bloody and torn to pieces. The paper is put in a time capsule and opened in 2009 at the elementary school where the little girl went and also Nicolas Cage's little boy. His little boy starts hearing voices and it's all linked together so that (DO NOT CONTINUE TO READ FROM HERE IF YOU DON'T WANT TO KNOW THE END OF THE STORY) he and a whole bunch of other little chosen children are taken to a "new world" with a "tree of life" by aliens with angel wings in spaceships that look like things described in Ezekiel in the Bible.

The problem is that the Bible makes it clear that NO ONE knows the time when the end will come. Other problems include the fact that Cage's dad, who is a pastor, says to them as they die at the end of the movie (the whole earth is destroyed - how's that for uplifting?!?), "Don't worry son, there will be life after this" or something of that nature. The problem with that is that the Cage character is not a Christian and he will not have life after death - the Bible makes that clear. The children are not going to be taken up and chosen to start a new Garden of Eden. All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.

There is one scene where someone refers to a woman's breast size. There is a LOT of drinking - Cage drinks a lot of whiskey and is so drunk in one scene that he is asleep and doesn't pick his son up from school at the end of the day. There is cursing and using the Lord's name in vain. Prophecy is rampant and made to look "Biblical" because it's so closely tied to prophecy in Ezekiel, but they've convoluted it. There is violence, lots of people killed, animals on fire running out of a forest (in prophecy), and the total destruction of the whole earth.

I'm displeased with the Plugged In review because it almost makes it sound like "some Christians will like it and some won't." Gee, that's ok and that's all... I'm telling you - this movie is NOT ok. Sarah and I spent the whole trip home discussing everything that was wrong with it and I'm so sorry I took her to see it. I told her we would even have to pray to get some of the scenes out of her head. (The little girl's bloody fingers, for example, was totally unexpected.)
I'm stepping out on a limb here to even share my thoughts. I don't want anyone to think I'm a horrible parent because I took Sarah to see this. I told her that this would be the LAST movie we watch in a movie theater. Even Horton Hears a Who turned out to have some things in it we disagreed with and I really don't mind little things that I can discuss with the children later, but it was obvious even from the previews and every single thing presented in this movie that we are in such a huge battle here for people's spirits. I heard people coming out of the theater even contemplating that the end of the earth could happen this way - with aliens coming down to save us from environmental doom or natural disaster. This is not what the Bible says, people!!! Do not be drawn into it.

If you were planning to go see this movie, don't. I like Nicolas Cage, but it's not worth it. And whatever you do, please do NOT let your teenagers go see this movie, especially alone. You will need to talk with them about EVERYTHING in the entire movie (and the previews).

Sonya Haskins
www.thehomeschooladvocate.com

1 comment:

Jen Pinch said...

Excellent thoughts! Thankyou.
I feel encouraged knowing that other families care about discernment in the movies they allow themselves and their children to be exposed to!
I was just writing an email to the Plugged In movie review guy when I came across your blog entry. This morning (on our local radio station) he gave the movie "Shutter Island" 1 1/2 out of 5 for "family friendliness". I am honestly disgusted by this. What would it take to rate a movie a ZERO out of 5? Honestly. To rate movies with "a casual view of sex" a "boatload of foul language" and "scenes of murdered children" (his words, not mine) anything more than a ZERO is shameful. God calls us to glorify Him in our lives. To keep our minds pure and focused on that which is good. I do not isolate my children from the world - but, I do take very seriously the job God has called me to as their mother. I want them to be in the world but not of it. Being wishy-washy in matters of media and what we feed our minds is a very dangerous carelessness. There are consequenses in our lives when we fail to call things as they are.
So, kudos to you for feeling uneasy and learning a valuable lesson. I bet your daughter will grow into a very discerning young woman. Good job Mama :)