Scribs wrote:It seems to me like most christian movies don't end up being fun to watch, they just seem to come off as preachy.
Off course a lot of Christian movies fall into an absurd cycle. They are made to "turn people to Christ" but only get watch by Christians, thus ultimately they "preach to the choir". Because they are termed directly as "Christian" they put of a lot of atheistic viewers simply by that label. I can understand a movie that affirms our beliefs but if you want to make a movie to turn people to Christianity you must be willing to go as a missionary into "Babylon" and give them something they'd want to watch even if the ideas don't agree with them.
Scribs wrote:The reason anyone goes to see a movie is entertainment. If you loose the entertainment factor, people wont go to your movies. If you could make a movie from a christian viewpoint, without the direct "you need to do this to be saved" line thrust awkwardly into the dialogue somewhere, it would probably do better.
Actually, no. There are a lot of people who consider movie-making an art-form the same way someone would consider a comic book, a Dostoevsky novel or a painting by Leonardo da Vinci to be art. Not all art or movies is or can be entertaining (I wouldn't call "
The Passion of the Christ" entertaining even if its a movie I admire - same goes for Johnny Cash's cover of "Hurt"). I don't think anyone goes to watch an Ingmar Bergman or Robert Bresson or Frederico Fellini film expecting to be entertained. If I were to make a spiritual movie I'd probably make it for an art-house theatre because quite frankly the entertainment-factor would severely burden or outweigh the spiritual factor.
Off course entertainment can be art (Original Star Wars trilogy and Indiana Jones are works of art) but few such movies actually reach people on a spiritual basis despite such elements in them. The exceptions are "Star Wars" and "The Matrix" trilogies, but they don't really qualify as Christian cinema despite use of the symbolism. Both show however that it is possible to make movies (for mass consumption) that could touch people spiritually. But still the attempts to be entertaining might clash with the attempts at presenting Christianity. When I wrote the previous post in this thread I wasn't talking about making a blockbuster.