Add a Review

  • This biography is truly remarkable and well recommended to watch.

    What a beautiful testimony of a family that converted from violence, deceit, abuse, drunkenness, hate, suicide and near murder - to a widely restored family of forgiveness, love, compassion and most importantly of faith in THEOS.

    He allows a lot of suffering when every member of a family is rejecting Him, but only one member of the family already changed the whole trajectory.

    THEOS obviously loves to write stories as such, with some stark contrasts between good and evil, making a powerful testimony to the world and a further motivation to seek him.

    PROS

    + Very powerful testimony.

    + They put a lot of effort into adapting his different stages of life with the proper settings.

    + Just about right length.

    CONS

    • It was kind of shocking to hear in such testimony the two evil names of C. S. Lewis and Billy Graham. This is very sad, but hopefully it was simply a lack of discernment and not a conscious endorsement of the evil within the 'Christian' world.
  • Josh McDowell is a writer and a public speaker who touches on aspects of familial relationships and Apologetics (the defending of Christianity) in general. This autobiographical film was based on his early life and explained his motivations behind what he does in his professional life.

    The film was screened after a seminar he had given at a church near where I lived, while the audience didn't get to have a chance to speak to or have an interactive session/Q&A with Josh McDowell himself before he left, the film itself answered on why the person himself devoted his life on spreading the word of the Lord. Scripted in a half-documentary, half-motion picture format, the film is narrative-driven, and is complemented by somber, moody music for some of the 'darker' scenes in the film concerning the abuses McDowell received in his early childhood. For some though, the film may seem preachy at times given its Christian message - but I personally thought it served more as a prelude or a backstory behind "More Than a Carpenter", a book he had written about the factual and historical basis behind the Christian faith.

    (On a side note, the film also has excellent set design and features some rather authentic, vintage '50-60s automobiles and costumes)
  • Josh McDowell Christian motivational speaker has lent out his life story and narrated this film Undaunted about his early years growing up in rural Michigan. After service in the Air Force, McDowell went to Wheaton College and became a minister. The story here is how he became a minister after overcoming a really lousy childhood, an alcoholic father, an abused mother, brothers and sisters who sound like white trash and even a farm hand who sexually abused him.

    There will be no one in the cast you recognize and the film was nicely photographed in the locations and I have to say in terms of costume and sets they did manage to recreate the Fifties era quite nicely.

    It's a good film of its type and should do well on the Christian circuit.