Reviewed by: Michael Karounos
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: | Good |
Moviemaking Quality: |
|
Primary Audience: | Adults Family Christians |
Genre: | Drama |
Length: | 1 hr. 20 min. |
Year of Release: | 2004 |
USA Release: |
February 20, 2004 |
Featuring |
Melyssa Ade Molly Sayers Mung-Ling Tsui Von Flores Stan Coles |
Director |
Colin Chilvers |
Producer |
Garden City Pictures [Canada] |
Distributor |
Pure Flix Entertainment, a subsidiary of AFFIRM Entertainment, a Sony Company |
Home Beyond the Sun takes place in present day China and narrates the experiences of a Bible college student who goes there to teach English for a semester. While there, Jenna (Melysse Ade) meets an eight-year-old Chinese orphan, Chu Lee (Molly Sayer). In the movie’s opening flashback, we learn that Chu Lee’s mother gave birth to her out of wedlock and without a birth license. Her father reported her to the state apparatus who, when they come to arrest the mother, unnecessarily kill her with a rifle from close range. Chu Lee is left in the care of a private orphanage and the story then picks up eight years later when Jenna arrives in China.
The movie is earnest in its attempt to inform us about the persecution of Christians in China, about the plight of unwanted children languishing in orphanages, and about the practical value of living life and making decisions based on a Christian worldview. The characters encourage one another to “trust in God,” remind each other of the “power of prayer,” to desire “what God wants,” and to realize that we’re all “a part of God’s plan.” Curiously, with the exception of a reference to Psalm 23 (and possibly a nod to Psalms 10:12), there are no quotations from scripture or even references to key scriptures. I don’t think this is a major fault, just an interesting gap in the context of an openly Christian film.
It would be easy to criticize a movie like this on formal grounds, but it would only reveal a reviewer’s bias for privileging form over content. To be charitable, the film does not meet the Hollywood production standards we’ve all become accustomed to. Although the movie appears to be filmed in digital video, it has that home-movie, soap-opera look that undermines its credibility. This is not a terrible fault, just a stumbling block for viewers accustomed to the lush aesthetics of big budget Hollywood films.
While I can’t recommend it on the basis of its filmic quality, I believe it can be a valuable instrument for instruction in Christian elementary schools, in home schools, and in Christian homes. For children under the age of 12, the movie teaches that life isn’t about video games, soccer matches, and mall mashing. It is important for young Christian children to see that in some countries, the mere ownership of a Bible gets you roughly handled and hauled off to prison. They will learn that prayer sometimes must be done in one’s “closet” (Matthew 6:6), because the alternative is arrest, social stigmatization, and poverty resulting from a criminal record that precludes employment in any meaningful line of work.
Children belonging to intact, nuclear families will gain insight into the pain of being an orphan, as both Chu Lee and Jenna are for much of the movie. More importantly, they will learn that even orphans have a Father who loves them, speaks to them through His word, and answers their faithful prayers in accordance with his “perfect and pleasing will” (Romans 12:2 NIV).
Additionally, the movie serves a useful purpose in publicizing the plight of China’s estimated 110,000 orphans, at least some of whom are available for adoption. Adoption is a wonderful opportunity for Christians who can’t have children of their own, or for those who would like to have an additional child. The movie’s mission, in part, is to convert the forsaken orphans to the status of the what the movie calls the “found forsaken” by sharing the temporal wealth of this fortunate land and the eternal riches of a life lived in communion with Jesus Christ.
In an era when multicultural values are co-opting Christian values, and group identity trumps individual identity, American Christians need to stretch their cultural limits and bring the world to them if they themselves can’t go out into the world, as young people like Jenna do. Adopting a child from China or Africa or Eastern Europe is one godly way to give something back to God and to rescue a child from the loveless horrors of institutionalized existence, to say nothing of disease, poverty, and various kinds of abuse.
“Home Beyond the Sun” has no objectionable elements and is a movie whose greatest utility is for teaching young Christians about the world outside of their own circumspect lives.
Violence: Minor / Profanity: None / Sex/Nudity: None
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My Ratings: Moral rating: Excellent! / Moviemaking quality: 2½