Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 2021


God's Not Dead: We the People

Buy God's Not Dead: We the People now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'God's Not Dead: We the People' is a 2021 American Christian drama film directed by Vance Null. The fourth installment in the 'God's Not Dead' series, it was released on October 4, 2021, in a three-night theatrical engagement, and grossed over $1.1 million in the domestic box office.

Plot



A group of parents led by a local pastor are home-schooling their children when a representative from social services makes an unannounced visit and determines the parents' teaching is not sufficient, in light of the requirements of the common core state standards. A local judge, played by Jeanine Pirro, gives them a week to prove that their education is adequate or the students will be forced to go to public school. The pastor and the parents head to Washington, D.C. to testify in front of a Congressional sub-committee on home-schooling. Much of the last half of the film consists mainly of long speeches by the parents, pastor, and members of Congress over the topic of home-schooling.

Cast



* David A. R. White as Reverend Dave Hill, a pastor who appeared in all three previous 'God's Not Dead' films.

* Antonio Sabto Jr. and Francesca Battistelli as Mike and Rebecca McKinnon, a couple who plan to homeschool their child

* Jeanine Pirro as Judge Elizabeth Neely, the local town judge who decides whether the McKinnons will continue to homeschool their children, send them to public school, or have them incarcerated if they refuse. Pirro previously made an uncredited cameo in the third film.

* Isaiah Washington as Rep. Daryl Smith, a Congressman who helps Dave.

* William Forsythe as Senator Robert Benson

*Matt Anspach as Brandon McKinnon, Mike and Rebecca's older son

*Benjamin Onyango as Reverend Jude Mbaye, a minister from Ghana and Dave Hill's friend who died in the previous film. He appears in a dream to encourage Dave to stand up for freedom.

* Dani Oliveros as Kayla Neely, Judge Neely's daughter who becomes Brandon's girlfriend

* Marco Khan as Misrab, Ayisha's estranged father who rejected her from the first film, and tries to reunite her in an attempt to redeem himself all while deciding whether or not to accept Jesus Christ as savior

* Hadeel Sittu as Ayisha, Misrab's daughter who accepted Christ as savior in the first film, and becomes involved in a car accident

* Paul Kwo as Martin Yip

Production



The film's production was announced on David A. R. White's Instagram in late 2020. It was filmed in Oklahoma during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Reception



The film was largely panned by critics. Steve Pulaski of 'Influx Magazine' gave the film a rare "F" letter-grade, criticizing the plot and message saying, "'God's Not Dead: We the People' is not merely the worst in an already-misbegotten series, but so utterly deplorable that its status as a three-night-only event in theaters at least assures that significantly fewer people will see it."

Christian Toto praised the film, stating that while it "shares the franchises flaws...its bold mission statement has never been more necessary."

References




Buy God's Not Dead: We the People now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 2021



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1108022046.