The Fighting Preacher
United States
611 people rated When Willard and Rebecca Bean are called on a mission to a town that's hostile towards them, they must choose whether to fight for their right to live there or love their hostile neighbors.
Drama
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Cast (18)
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29/05/2023 14:17
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Naeem dorya
29/05/2023 13:53
source: The Fighting Preacher
user9657708242373
23/05/2023 06:42
My family and I loved it. Great story. Great music, story line, and actors. Great life lessons taught. A real feel-good movie. TC Christensen's best yet.
Jameel Abdula
23/05/2023 06:42
An LDS accomplished boxer & wife are sent on a mission from Utah to New York in 1915 to resurrect an LDS farm and acquire properties for the church. The area has "Book" historical importance as the place of battle between ancient Morman travelers to the New World (BCE) the Nephites & the Jaredites. Side note: Others maintain the site should be in ancient Central America. In Hollywood fashion our missionaries are saintly while the locals are gruff nasty-spirited haters of Mormonism, but in the end apple pie & good deeds wins them over. Successful they return to Salt Lake in 1939. Note: Not shown is that he divorces his first wife (two children) and marries a younger woman (four children). The writer director Christensen, also an LDS member, has done many promotional faith based, especially LDS, movies.
🥝 يوسف 🫒
23/05/2023 06:42
"The Fighting Preacher" benefits from a slightly fresher style than other Mormon films of its kind and definitely shows more promising production value. Still, the performances are one-dimensional and the script is incredibly predictable.
It's a boring piece that feels just like the other propaganda stories of its kind and Mormon films still feel that its fair to predict "outsiders" as one-dimensional bullies that in order for them to become a decent person, they must convert to the religion.
I found the film to be generally poorly done considering the time it was released and felt that at this stage, there should be no excuses anymore to prevent Mormon cinema to reach a new standard. Unfortunately, the genre is trapped in a never ending "early saints" setting, determined to portray Mormons as perfectly kind hearted people being victimized by everyone in the country.
The main lead's performance is the only thing that grounds the film for me in some kind of reality. Unfortunately, everything else fails.
👑 _MALìK_ 👑❤
23/05/2023 06:42
This film start with a boxer "Willard" beating by his opponent on the ring, and ten years later he offer a mission to manage a church scene! As turnout, this film is about Willard change from a boxer to become a preacher, and he eventually accept by the people who hostile with him at the beginning! He achieve this by contribute to them! Entire film quite slow, full of boring conversation and quite frustrated overuse scene! Such as, overuse of the low intensity punching scene, and overuse of the close-up scene! Make the film unwatchable! The fighting scene at the church portray like kindergarten level! Barely laughable scene is, Palmyra imitate her mother "Rebecca" cover the eye, when watching her father fight at the church! At the end, the people at the church unwilling Willard left them! That's it! Wasting time to watch!
Buboy Villar
23/05/2023 06:42
In his autobiography, Willard Bean wrote: "When people tell my story they usually get it about half right." This movie is an example of that; the screenwriter got it about half right. The sad thing is the parts he got wrong were deliberately wrong because the writer thought it would make a better story. The real, accurate story would have made a much better movie. Sadder still is that in interviews the writer presented his altered version as true and accurate.
Visually this movie is beautiful. Mr. Christensen is one of the best cinematopraphers working today. David McConnell does a very good job portraying Willard Bean, but unfortunately, he received some bad direction which made some of his scenes silly and eye-rolling.
If you like "Mormon movies", you'll love this one. It has some touching moments and some good lessons, and even a thinly disguised Three Nephites Story (which is so poorly put together it leaves the audience wondering what just happened). One of the ways the writer changed the true story was to create an a-little-child-shall-lead-them storyline. This is always good for a few tears whether it's true or not. Adding this storyline feels like an insult to Willard Bean's life and his true character, but it's a guaranteed Kleenex moment in any "Mormon movie".
Visually, I would give this movie 8 out of 10 stars. Unfortunately, Mr Christensen insists on being a one-man band who writes, directs, shoots and produces and I can't give the final product more than 4 out of 10 stars. Had this been a team effort with a good writer who stuck to the true story, and good director working with one of the industries great cinematographers, this could have been an outstanding movie.
One final note. Before you lump me in the category of Mormon hater, or disgruntled Latter-day Saint with a chip on his shoulder, I am neither of these. I am a devout Latter-day Saint with no ax to grind. I am simply giving an honest assessment of the movie.
Nick🔥🌚🔥
23/05/2023 06:42
In the realm of independent filmmakers telling inspiring true stories of people of faith meeting challenges there is no one more impressive than T.C. Christensen. T.C. is a story teller who uses his talents as a writer, cinematographer and director to bring to life tales of ordinary people who are called upon to do extraordinary things -- and with faith in God accomplish seemly impossible challenges.
THE FIGHTING PREACHER unfolds the amazing story of Willard Been and his wife Rebecca who in 1905 are called upon to be caretakers for their Church of sacred property that had been abandoned when the members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were forced to flee due the hatred of their neighbors. What begins as a 3 year calling transforms into a 25 year span that changes their lives and those who still carrying on their dislike for "Mormons".
Not only has T.C. skillfully condensed a 25 year story into a fascinating film that is beautifully photographed and skillfully edited (by son Tanner) but has discovered two wonderful performers new to the screen. David McConnell as Willard and Cassidy Hubert as his wife Rebecca bring to life these two remarkable people. Scarlett Hazen who was so good in T.C.'s LOVE, KENNEDY shines in the role of their daughter Palmyra.
THE FIGHTING PREACHER is a film that I am proud to recommend to others and one that I will return to the theatre to see again. I look forward to its future release on Blu-ray to add to my revered collection of T.C. films: 17 MIRACLES, EPHRAIM'S RESUCE, THE COKEVILLE MIRACLE and LOVE, KENNEDY. These are films that I actually rewatch from time to time.
Moon#
23/05/2023 06:42
I wanted to like this movie because I try to give everything a fair shot but I couldn't make it past 15 minutes. The story, the acting, the editing- it's all so forced. The title pretty much sums it up - a preacher who literally fights for his faith. Maybe the LDS community has heard these stories over and over so a title doesn't matter but I might have stuck around just a bit longer if I didn't see the boxing thing coming a mile away.
I'm guessing the wife "Rebecca" dies because her credit is far down the list but couldn't stick around long enough to confirm. She has zero personality and Willard is just way too goofy and milk toast to be appealing.
L O U K M A N🔥
23/05/2023 06:42
Great for leaning the value of living others despite differences