Mike McCahill 

God’s Not Dead review – warped evangelist drama

The content lurking beneath the telemovie sheen of this religious drama veers from the suspect to the outright hateful, writes Mike McCahill
  
  

God's Not Dead
Semi-credible … God's Not Dead. Photograph: PR

Rush-released for Easter, this warped evangelist item – a perturbing US sleeper hit – proceeds from a semi-credible dramatic framework in initiating a debate between a pious student (Shane Harper) and his atheist professor (erstwhile Hercules Kevin Sorbo, an unlikely proponent of Bertrand Russell). The multi-stranded content lurking beneath its sun-dappled telemovie sheen, however, veers from the suspect (see the would-be Christian beaten by her Muslim father!) to the outright hateful: by the jawdropping climax, wherein a preacher is effectively granted divine right to mow down non-believers, "doing God's work" has become indistinguishable from Grand Theft Auto. Ban this sick filth.

 

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