Like Arrows
United States
683 people rated When conflict, rebellion, and resentment overwhelm their family, Charlie and Alice are forced to change their parenting strategy, and are surprised to find that effective, life-long solutions were closer than they thought.
Drama
Cast (18)
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User Reviews
LaMaman D'ephra
28/11/2025 17:20
Like Arrows
Luciole Lakamora
23/08/2024 16:00
Beautiful movie to enjoy with your whole family. Faith, love, unity and much more. We enjoyed every minute of it.
Dr Dolor The Special One 🐝
23/08/2024 16:00
This movie had touched upon some very deep issues that can take place even in good families with the best of intentions. But the way this family navigated through their challenges, where they turned for strength and answers and their openness to continue learning was uplifting.
Suyoga Bhattarai
23/08/2024 16:00
As a grandmother, it definitely made me wish I could "go back" and do a few things different. The acting in some instances could have been better but overall, it was a definite "must see" for everyone!! Great message
Moyu
23/08/2024 16:00
This "movie" plays, in all respects but camera steadiness, like a random assortment of home recorded skits. This impression is amplified by the fact that 80% of the movie is set inside the main family's home. Here is a short list of bad things about this movie, from the perspective of a typical movie watcher:
1. Awkward Scene Transitions
Like I said in the intro, it really does feel like each scene is its own skit, with very little relation to those surrounding it. As such, most of the movie's ideas go completely undeveloped in its ninety minutes.
2. Random Jumps in Time
It really is just that; every 20 minutes or so, there appear three words on the screen saying, "X years later". Pick a number between 1 and 10. There is a 30% chance that your number appears as X at some point in the movie. Also twenty-seven. Twenty-seven is one of them.
3. Caricature of Atheism
This one includes a tiny spoiler, but you probably don't care since I've destroyed any intention you had of seeing this movie...
One of the children in the main family becomes an atheist, apparently in his teenage years. His drifting from the Christian faith is shown as in direct correlation with his involvement in partying and doing drugs. No doubt this is reality for some people, but the real problem is this: The "atheism" depicted is really just a search for truth. This is rather explicitly communicated in two scenes in particular.
In the second (which should be looked at first, I think), the atheist son is moving out of the house. His car is packed, and his mother is going through a box of his things, examining each one nostalgically. One of the first things she sees is a book entitled, "The Illusion of God". This isn't a real book, according to my search of the internet, and is probably to be interpreted as an allusion to The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins. Horrified, the mother shows him the book, as if to demand an explanation. He pauses before talking, as if she'd just found a baggie of coke in his glove compartment. Then she finds a baggie of coke in his glove compartment. Can it get more explicit than that? It's worth noting that the acting in this scene is awful, so that virtually all of its intended emotional effect is absent.
The first scene is basically the same script as the second but the son is 3 years younger (remember the time jumps?). His mother opens his bedroom door to see him reading a book. We don't see the title (edit: it is "The Stranger" by Albert Camus), but in light of the first scene, it's safe to assume this was the spark that sent him down the path to atheism. "Something for a class?" she asks. "No, just for fun," he replies. Literally the next words out of his mouth are a request for permission to go to a concert on the weekend. The band, he says, is "kind of" Christian.
It's clear the writers want to communicate that any reading of the arguments of the "other side" is a sure sign of apostasy. It's as if they thought the arguments were unanswerable. But surely this is not the case if, as they claim, Christianity is true? One wonders if they really believe it is...
Maki Nthethe
23/08/2024 16:00
The movie is not perfect, but the message is and you really enjoy and get going with the movie. Great lessons for parents and children.
user3480465457846
23/08/2024 16:00
This movie is wonderful, great inspiration really shows the importance of having God be first in life and raising your kids with God first. I would recommend this to believers and non believers both the world we are living in today really needs the He must increase I must decrease motto.
Mai Selim Hamdan
23/08/2024 16:00
If you are a follower of Christ, and you have children or want children- you must see this movie. It doesn't give you all the answers, by any means; but it will open your eyes. Everything in life comes together and unfolds just the way God wants it to... and as I was watching this, it came full circle for a personal reason. I kept putting off watching this, but half way through it clicked in my brain that God had meant for me to watch this and everything in my life had happened for a reason. Cheesy, I know. But it's definitely worth a watch!!
yayneaseged
23/08/2024 16:00
It was such a blessing to be an extra several times in this movie! This is such a great, raw story of how parenting really can be. It is a great lead-in to FamilyLIfe's Art of Parenting!
QuinNellow
23/08/2024 16:00
If you have kids or care about the plight of the family and young people in our society, this picture will hit your sweet spot. Once the viewer adjusts to some abrupt plot jumps throughout the lifespan, some undeniably touching moments and the film's solid faith underpinning promote the practical application of some important principles over the entertainment value of the flick. Some themes will challenge people who are unaware of what the Bible teaches and why. Regardless, this film is well worth watching. Be prepared to go away with something to ponder that could make a difference in your relationships with the people you love.