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Plot
Two men embark on a trip to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial guided by the letters their fathers wrote while serving in the war. Release Year: 2015 Rating: 5.9/10 (15 voted) Critic's Score: /100 Director: Carey Scott Stars: Kevin Downes, David A.R. White, Stephen Baldwin Storyline
With the Vietnam War raging in 1969, two young fathers report for duty. A man of great faith and a doubtful cynic. A quarter-century later, their sons, Wayne and John Paul (David A.R. White and Kevin Downes), meet as strangers. Guided by handwritten letters from their fathers from the battlefield, they embark on an unforgettable journey to The Wall-the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. Along the way, they discover the devastation of war cannot break the love of a father for his son. Writers: Kevin Downes, Carey Scott Cast: Kevin Downes -
John
David A.R. White -
Wayne
Stephen Baldwin -
Mansfield
Candace Cameron Bure -
Cynthia
Rebecca St. James -
Annie
Sean McGowan -
Steven George
Scott Whyte -
Eddie adams
Ryan Doom -
Pvt. Shears
Chriss Anglin -
Arresting Officer
Peggy Lord Chilton -
Julia
Michael Daley -
Pvt. Goldstein
Brian F. Durkin -
Rocky
Billoah Greene -
Vietnam Soldier
Alex Huynh -
NVA Captain
David O'Donnell -
Cowboy Ted
Taglines:
A Story of Fatherhood. A Journey of Brotherhood.
Details
Official Website:
Official site
Country: USA Language: English Release Date: 1 July 2015 Filming Locations: Santa Clarita, California, USA
Did You Know?
Trivia:
This movie is David A. R. White's 43rd acting film. See more »
User Review
Author:
Rating:
I have no objection to the output of PureFlix Entertainment. Christian
movie goers should have their films on the big screen just as much as
fans of horror or comedy or action pictures. The writers and directors
of the films put out by PureFlix have set out on a mission, to give a
forgotten audience a voice on the big screen. Fine, but for Heaven's
sake, PLEASE send these people to film school! Over the last two years
I've sat through movie after movie from PureFlix and they all seem to
have the same problem: they are dry, limp, dumbbell T.V. movie-style
productions featuring bad actors reciting bad dialogue like a church
play put on by people who didn't show up for rehearsal.
This should not be construed as a knee-jerk reaction to Christian
films. I support Christian films, but a bad movie is a bad movie no
matter what it's about. I'm looking squarely at The Book of Esther
(2013), Gods Not Dead (2014), Do Your Believe? (2015) and PureFlix's
latest head-scratcher Faith of Our Fathers.
I actually saw this movie at a special screening back in January when
it was called To the Wall. Why the title was changed I don't know. To
the Wall isn't any better, but its much easier to remember. Faith of
Our Fathers too closely resembles Flags of Our Fathers, the Clint
Eastwood movie that you should watch instead. Both movies are
ostensibly about soldiers who fought and died in American conflicts.
Eastwood's film was about the soldiers at Iwo Jima. The PureFlix film
is sort-of about soldiers in Vietnam, but spends an exhaustive amount
of time as a goofball road comedy.
The story of Faith of our Fathers/To the Wall is, at its heart, about
reconnection. It begins with a good-hearted guy named John Paul George
(Kevin Downes) that's actually what people call him whose father
was a soldier in Vietnam who never made it home. What he left for his
son was a pack of letters that John Paul George has held onto for all
these years. Spurred by a desire to find out what happened to him, John
Paul George heads east to get information from a veteran who served
with his dad during the war Now, here's what you should know about John
Paul George he's a doofus. I'm not being mean, he walks through this
movie with the same expression my dog gives me when I hide the tennis
ball behind my back. He does things that no sane human being would do
on a road trip, like letting a pair of strangers borrow the car when
they ask for help. He trusts quite a few people in this movie that he
really shouldn't. I understand the need for a trusting nature but it
wouldn't have been out of character for John Paul George to enter this
film falling off a turnip truck.
John Paul George's plans hit a snag when he meets the son of the man
his dad served with. He is Wayne (David A.R. White) a strange
individual who seemed to have mimicked his personality on a bad Nick
Nolte impression. I'm not kidding, White affects a gravelly voice and a
haircut that might be at home on an bad SNL sketch. It's a bad
performance really bad.
Naturally, the two don't trust each other. John Paul George is the
good-hearted dope, and Wayne is the cynic who lives in a trailer and
seems to live for the singular purpose of being mad at the world.
Reluctantly, they decide to help each other. They decided to take a
road trip to the Vietnam Memorial in Washington D.C. Can two walking
clichés share a road trip without driving each other crazy? What do you
think? The present-day scenes with Wayne and John Paul George are
inter-cut with scenes of Wayne's dad in Vietnam back in 1969 which
look like they were filmed in someone's back yard (I swear the platoon
passes the same tree four times!). John Paul George's father is named
Steven (Sean McGowan) and writes letters back home to his infant son.
His platoon is led by Sergeant Mansfield (Stephen Baldwin) who not to
give too much away provides the film's most baffling development. He
becomes a human connection between John Paul George and his father that
I'm pretty sure involved a time machine.
No matter who made Faith of Our Fathers/To the Wall and for what
purpose, this is a bad movie really bad, laughably bad. The
production values seem borrowed "The Beverly Hillbillies" up to, and
including, the moving back projection during the driving scenes. The
screenplay is all over the place. Every development is painfully
convenient and the story moves back and forth between pathos and
slapstick comedy almost at random, dealing with two characters that are
so badly written and acted that they seem like Looney Tunes characters.
I realize that I could be accused of beating up a film that is not my
taste. On the contrary, I've liked religious themed movies in the past.
But I like films that are well made and that have a point of view. I
also realize that my taste in religious films leans more toward films
that challenge me, like The Rapture, The Passion of the Christ, The
Last Temptation of Christ and even parts of Heaven is for Real. Even Oh
God! had a nice message. But Faith of Our Fathers/To the Wall is an
aggravating mess. It wants to be a screwball comedy and a heart-rending
message about fathers and sons. Pick one guys, you can't have both.
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