Thursday, October 6, 2011

Watch Courageous Online Megavideo

The film revolves around being a good father and husband. I'm not a father or husband, but I get what they are trying to say. One thing that irritates me rather, he is thinking about some prick trying to shake what they believe in the throat of people. Certainly, nobody is arrogant enough to do that with someone, however, thousands of spectators. Wait ....

Therefore, the film focuses on Adam (Alex Kendrick), a police officer and a husband and two children. Adam seems to have a hard time finding work in balance with the house (shown in a scene in which he says "I love you" to his boss on the phone, but hey, it was probably on purpose). Adam's relationship with their children seems to have lost. His daughter, who was afraid to show his love for her and her son, I think I called stubborn because he likes playing video games and run 5 miles a day. What an ass. Anyway, Adam has a close-knit clan with his fellow officers Nathan (Kevin Bevel), David (Ben Davies) and Shane (Kevin Downes). They go out together and shoot the shit. Some time later, while working in the construction of a shed with a new friend Javier (Robert Amaya), one of the officers arrived at the home of Adam and said one of the members of his family was in a car accident.


From there, we have 30 minutes or more tears of the family that seems never going to end. Seriously, it gets a little uncomfortable about how much to mourn, at least for me. I've heard some older couples, sobbing in the rows ahead of me. It tells you what kind of people is this (And then me!). Adam and consulted with their pastor to speak in some sense to him, and of course, he said something along the lines of contact with God. I would say that waste and bang whores, but obviously not the case. So he designed this resolution in which God promises to his responsibilities as father and husband. It shows your friends and they are very interested in joining drink the Kool-Aid. Then we have a scene with key members of the reading of some kind of formal oath suits and the rest of the movie starts to work its resolution.

How brave you like - a production directed overtly Christian about four police officers to learn about God and family - it is probably a reflection of how you view the church is a test too long or walkie-filled sermons challenging engagement their god and values. Or just not your thing, first. The movie starts well with interesting characters, dialogue, fair, and the tone of a great episode of 7th Heaven, but the delegates finally over the top drama and great impartiality suffocating. Prayers are said and done on a regular basis, a cynical agnostic converts and immediately becomes a better man, and the characters stop lecturing for several minutes in the plan of God all in all, but looking at the camera and the public. To the credit of the movie, the tragic accident at his center is managed with respect and not exploited to facilitate the moralizing, and it is very touching.