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Home / Bay of Plenty Times / Lifestyle

Movie review: The Case for Christ

Toby Woollaston
By Toby Woollaston
Reviewer·NZME.·
11 May, 2017 08:06 AM2 mins to read

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PREMIERE: Erika Christensen, director Jon Gunn, Mike Vogel, and screenwriter Brian Bird at the Chicago premiere of The Case For Christ. GETTY IMAGES

PREMIERE: Erika Christensen, director Jon Gunn, Mike Vogel, and screenwriter Brian Bird at the Chicago premiere of The Case For Christ. GETTY IMAGES

My reticence towards films that champion fundamental Christianity in contemporary society is that they tend to be preachy and often err on the side of sentimentality and over simplification. I'm sure there are exceptions but I've yet to see any. The Case for Christ, thankfully, is not one of those films ... at least not entirely.

Directed by Jon Gunn (My Date with Drew) with a screenplay written by Brian Bird (Captive) and based on the autobiography of the same name by Lee Strobel, The Case for Christ tells the story of its author's journey from atheism to a faith based belief in Christ.

It's 1980 and Lee Strobel, played by a very moustachioed Mike Vogel (Cloverfield, The Help), is an award winning investigative journalist for the Chicago Tribune, and a devout atheist. After his wife Leslie (Erika Christensen) converts to Christianity (the fundamental type), Lee attempts to debunk her beliefs by undertaking an investigation into the crux of the religion - the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Meanwhile their marriage teeters on the brink of breakdown.

I have read Strobel's best-selling book and as someone who examined faith through a similar lens I found his investigation a fascinating one. However, here the detailed arguments in the source material have been somewhat glossed over by Bird to allow for its packing down into a two hour film. The unfortunate (but perhaps unavoidable) result leaves its meaty arguments vague at best. However, it does allow the film to explore Lee's relationship with Leslie. Unfortunately, the depiction of Lee's marriage as well as his investigation into Christianity presents two plot lines that feel disparate and neither appear fully realised. Furthermore, the film's delivery is not without its fair share of mis-steps, cliches and awkward moments. Despite this, Vogel and Christensen do a convincing job of a married couple in torment, but its investigative concerns fall well short of contemporaries like Spotlight or Zodiac.

The Case for Christ does however prove a little more engrossing than most films of its denomination and raises some intriguing questions. One might posit that the more Strobel investigated the Christian world the more he succumbed to its rhetoric - a sort of Stockholm Syndrome for journalists. Or perhaps Strobel dug up some genuine truths. Thankfully, it focuses more on the story than the pulpit.

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Rating: 2.5 stars

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