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The new film
"Letters To God" is advertised as being from one of the
producers of "Facing the Giants." If this is true then I
wish the makers of "Letter" had learned the "Facing the
Giants" lesson. That being you don't need to beat people
over the head with religion in order to make your point.
"Letters To God" keeps letting the story be interrupted
by the sponsor, which in this case is Christianity.
The core story concerns a young boy named Tyler (Tanner
M aguire) who has a malignant brain tumor. He is taking
chemotherapy which may or may not work. His father is
recently deceased and that leaves his mother Maddie
(Robin Lively) with the main responsibility of the
household. Her oldest son Ben (Michael Bolten) is
feeling isolated. He loves Tyler but resents the time
spent on him.
Maddie's mother Olivia (Maree Cheatham) moves in to help
out. Maddie goes back to work and on good days Tyler
goes back to school. He goes because his best friend Sam
(Bailee Madison) misses him being there. Tyler writes to
God about all these things and gives the letters to his
local postman, Brady (Jeffrey SS Johnson).
Brady has problems of his own. He is an alcoholic who
has lost custody of his son. Through getting to know
Tyler and his family he sees that there is a way to get
his life back on track.
"Letters To God" is said to be based on a true story and
it is easy to see how one little boy's letters to God
could influence people. As shown in the film, Tyler has
the personality and the drive to affect change. Sam's
grandfather (Ralph Waite) calls him one of God's
warriors.
The acting in the film is acceptable. Maguire is
especially effective as Tyler. He manages to project
fear, serenity and acceptance all in one package.
Madison, who was so good in "Brothers," serves as this
film's cheerleader. She is bubbly and bouncy and full of
good spirits.
Both Lively and Johnson are easy to watch. They don't do
anything extra with their roles and with a little effort
they could have had more of an impact. Cheatham and
Waite play the older, wiser characters in the movie.
The scenes in the film that take part in the church
and/or with the pastor are stilted and artificial. And
when the messages about prayer are interjected the movie
comes to a halt. The makers of "Facing the Giants" and
"Fireproof," which are the gold standards for
"Christian" movies, knew the plot had to be solid in
order to sell the movie. The message is best added when
it is done in an almost subliminal way.
The movie is rated PG for its theme of illness.
"Letters To God" is a film that will touch your heart.
Who can dismiss the validity of a young boy's faith in
the face of an almost insurmountable illness? Still you
wish the filmmakers had just trusted the story to
deliver the message of faith and hope rather than pack
it full of "Christian commercials." (Huffinton Post)
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