RATING: 
                    		  PG for thematic material. 
                    		  DVD RELEASE: 
                    		  August 10, 2010 
                    		  GENRE: 
                    		  Drama 
                    		  STARRING: 
                    		  Jeffrey SS Johnson, Robyn Lively, Tanner Maguire, 
Maree Cheatham, Ralph Waite  
                    		  DIRECTOR: 
                    		   David Nixon, Patrick Doughtie  
                    		  DISTRIBUTOR: 
                    		  Vivendi Entertainment  
                    		  WEB SITE: 
                    		  Letters to God  Movie Website 
                    		    
			 
							 
							
							
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				Movie review 
				
				Letters to God 
				
				By Chris Carpenter  
		CBN.com Program Director
		
				  
				
				
		“Clearly, you are a  letter from Christ showing the result of our ministry among you. This  "letter" is written not with pen and ink, but with the Spirit of the  living God. It is carved not on tablets of stone, but on human hearts.” – II  Corinthians 3:3 
		Serving as the closing statement in Letters to God, a faith based motion picture releasing on DVD today, the aforementioned scripture passage from the New Testament does a  credible job in summing up the true story of a terminally ill boy.  
		Here is the premise – a little boy with brain cancer shares  his thoughts, dreams, and concerns in letters that he writes to God.  Subsequently, the troubled mail man who is  tasked with ‘delivering’ these letters eventually turns his life around due to  the unflinching Christian witness of the boy. 
		Jeffrey Johnson (Burn Notice, Criminal Minds) plays  Brady, the affable but down-on-his-luck mail man who is assigned the route  where the mysterious “letters to God” appear faithfully in a mailbox.  They are being sent by a young boy named  Tyler (Tanner Maguire).  Brady ends up  befriending the terminally ill boy and his mother (Robyn Lively).  Strangely, he finds himself spending more and  more time around them and soon begins to sense a change in his life from  reading the letters that Tyler  writes. 
		While this movie is certainly a triumph of life over death  it struggles in its rather narrow story arc.   Without any real twists or turns, viewers pretty much know the outcome  as soon as the skeptical, alcoholic mail man takes on his new route.  However, viewers will be delighted to find  out that powerful evangelism can take place in the simplest of circumstances.  
		Providing a sense of comic relief in the sometimes  heavy-handed drama is Tyler’s  fiesty best friend, the tomboyish Samantha (Bailee Madison).  Equally amusing is her gruff, curmudgeonly grandfather, Cornelius  Perryfield, played by Hollywood veteran Ralph  Waite (Pa, The Waltons).  
		David Nixon, who served many roles in the making of landmark  Christian movies Facing the Giants and Fireproof, including assistant  director, moves into the director’s role for Letters to God.  While his  intentions are good, his efforts to revive a rather pedestrian script fall  flat. 
		The Christian community will be delighted with this movie as  there are several overt references to faith and living your life for God.  In one highly emotional scene between Tyler  and Mr. Perryfield, the octogenarian says,  “You have been handpicked by God for a role of a lifetime.”  In another, Mr. Perryfield quips, “God is  truth and it is your job to point them to it.” 
		The DVD's extra features are worth taking a look at for several reasons. In the behind the scenes featurette, several of the movie's key pesonnel including Nixon and co-director/writer Patrick Doughtie share their vision for moviemaking -- that it should be about finding projects that feature people triumphing over adversity. In addition, while the commentary section with Nixon and Doughtie sometimes falls into formulaic patterns it is refreshing to hear them share about the film's core elements -- faith, hope, and love. The theatrical trailer is also included. 
		It is important to note that this movie does not end with  the closing credits.  Perhaps the main  objective of Letters to God is for  viewers to start a dialogue about cancer, God, and Christianity in their  lives.  Conversely, the movie’s Web site provides tools for individuals to begin a cancer ministry in their church. 
		Film critics will undoubtedly say Letters to God doesn’t match up to other movies in its genre; its  acting is bland and lifeless, and it plays out like a bad Hallmark movie.  While some of these criticisms are valid, I  was left with one underlying question:   Will this movie be a life-changing experience for many who attend?  My answer is yes. 
		 
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        Comments?   Email me  
        Related article: God's Love is In the Mail 
        More articles by Chris Carpenter on   CBN.com 
          
		 
						
							
 
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