Grace Unremarkable

Here's another example of how Christianity Today is refusing to join the "circle the wagons" mentality of so much Christian media, and instead engaging art with critical discernment and an insistence on excellence.

Filed under: On Movies & Media"Christian" EntertainmentGrace UnpluggedKenneth R. Morefield

Sometimes artists dare to do the hard work of reaching up to catch the truth's edge in a way that enlarges our vision.

Sometimes artists give in to what's easy, handing down what the audience wants to hear — and they're applauded by the choir to which they preach.

Here's how Ken Morefield begins his review of Grace Unplugged at Christianity Today...

Grace UnpluggedThe Hunger GamesGraceHunger
I've always found this kind of cause marketing puzzling. It seems to tacitly admit that the product is not good enough to sell tickets on its own. I'm not against niche marketing; there is actually something a little refreshing about seeing a Christian film stop worrying about crossover appeal and just making the faith content explicit. But doesn't it still have to be a good movie?


That's just the beginning. Read the whole thing. It's another example of how Christianity Today is refusing to join the "circle the wagons" mentality of so much Christian media, and instead engaging art with critical discernment and an insistence on excellence.

Morefield says,

Grace Unplugged Grace UnpluggedHome Alone 2The Mary Tyler Moore Show

And yet, Morefield's review, good as it is, is unlikely to persuade most of the people who are excited about this film. You can see what many of them think about the work of discernment in comments like this one from a guy named Dave:

"I can tell you that the audience I saw the film with adored it." - proof once again that if a critic doesn't like it, most people will. I will be going to see the movie - and a bit more excited about it now than before I read the review.

I know what Mark Twain would have said to that:

Whenever you find you are on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect.

And Oscar Wilde might have added:

The public have always, and in every age, been badly brought up. They are continually asking Art to be popular, to please their want of taste, to flatter their absurd vanity, to tell them what they have been told before, to show them what they ought to be tired of seeing...

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