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September 2008 Issue

by Michael Foust
If standing ovations are any indication,
the makers of Facing the Giants probably have another hit
on their hands.
Sherwood Pictures' latest film, Fireproof, won't release
in theaters until September 26, but it's been screened for pastors
and Christian leaders all summer, and often to enthusiastic crowds.
At the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting in Indianapolis,
between three to four thousand people saw the film, with many
standing during the closing credits, applauding the movie's focus
on a biblical view of marriage.
The plot focuses on the struggling marriage of a firefighter
named Caleb (played by Kirk Cameron) and his wife, Catherine (Erin
Bethea), both of whom are seeking a divorce after having fallen
"out of love." Their lack of communication and their
disagreements over finances as well as his addiction to
Internet pornography and her budding romance at work are
tearing them apart. Caleb's father, though, refuses to see the
young couple split up and gives his son a "Love Dare"
journal a forty-day experiment in which Caleb must complete
a loving action toward his wife each day. Having rescued numerous
people from fires, Caleb sets out to rescue his own marriage and
his wife's heart.
The movie had a $500,000 budget, which is still tiny by Hollywood
standards, but five times the $100,000 budget of Facing the
Giants and twenty-five times the budget of Sherwood's first
movie, Flywheel. The bigger budget particularly
during firefighting scenes, where special effects were required
is evident on the screen. It is expected to open on significantly
more screens and in more cities than did Facing the Giants.
"They just keep knocking them out of the park. I've seen
every one of them," said Jim Ballard, a Utah-based North
American Mission Board missionary who saw a screening of the movie
this summer. "I think this is going to address some major
issues with marriages. And it's got enough evangelism in it that
people can get saved."
Sherwood Pictures is a not-for-profit ministry of Sherwood
Baptist Church in Albany, Georgia, and the brainchild of brothers
Stephen and Alex Kendrick, two associate pastors who have written,
produced, and directed all three films. Just like the previous
two films, Fireproof features a volunteer cast and crew,
with church members holding the majority of the roles. Approximately
1,200 people were involved, doing everything from cooking for
the cast and crew to acting. Cameron, known for his role in several
Christian films as well as his star role in the 1980s and early
1990s ABC sitcom Growing Pains, turned down a payment for
the film and asked instead that a donation be made to a ministry
he and his wife run, Camp Firefly. To prepare for his role as
a firefighting captain, he worked out and gained about fifteen
pounds.
With one out of every two marriages in the U.S. ending in divorce,
officials with Sherwood Pictures hope that churches get behind
the film and help couples learn how to "fireproof" and
strengthen their own marriages. They've launched two Web sites:
FireproofTheMovie.com, which is the official movie Web site, and
FireproofMyMarriage.com, which has resources for singles, couples,
and churches. Additionally, B&H Publishing Group is scheduled
to release a paperback version of The Love Dare book around
the time of the movie's release in September.
Groups such as the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious
Liberty Commission, Focus on the Family, and FamilyLife have backed
the film and are urging people to go see it.
"Obviously, we think that marriage is a crucial issue
to address in our culture inside and outside the church,"
said Michael Catt, executive producer of the film and senior pastor
of Sherwood Baptist. "[Marriage has] become simply a contract,
a piece of paper. We hope that the movie is going to impact homes,
not only inside the church but outside the church, because every
one of us knows a couple that struggles; either we are or we know
somebody who is.
"If couples learn some things out of this film that will
help them in their marriage, then it will be successful to us.
If we can help save some marriages that are on the brink of going
off a cliff, it would be great."
Cameron isn't the movie's only professional actor or actress.
Bethea is a member of the Actor's Equity Association, a stage
actor's union, and is employed at Disney World in Orlando. Fireproof
is her first major film role. (She had a small part in Facing
the Giants.) She believed in the film's message so much that
she quit her previous job at Disney losing her paycheck
and benefits in order to have time for the volunteer lead
role. Yet when the movie finished filming in fall 2007, Disney
called again, offering her a position with better benefits and
better hours. It was confirmation from God to her that she had
made the right decision.
"I think the things that this movie could do for peoples'
lives are immeasurable," said Bethea, a longtime Sherwood
member who thought she was too young for the part and was surprised
when chosen. "I think the message is timeless. [Love is]
not based on an emotion. It's not birds chirping and flowers blooming
all the time. Sometimes it's hard, and it's a decision. Very often
love starts with an action and then follows with an emotion, rather
than vice versa as we tend to think that it does."
Some of the movie's most intense moments come with Caleb and
Catherine arguing. In one of them, she ends up crying, asking
for a divorce.
"What we keep hearing from those fight scenes from couples
is, 'Do you guys have a camera in my house, because my wife and
I have had those fights,'" Bethea said. "I think that's
why they're so hard to watch, because they're so real. This couple
is fighting about real issues. They're fighting about finances.
They're fighting because of miscommunication. They're fighting
because he struggles with an Internet pornography issue."
The film deals with the subject of Internet pornography in
a delicate way that won't embarrass or shock church members. In
fact, the words "porn" or "pornography" are
never mentioned. It was important to deal with the subject, Catt
said, because Internet pornography is tearing marriages apart
at an alarming rate and, he said, churches too often are failing
to address it.
"She [Catherine] refers to [Caleb viewing] trash on the
Internet, so that when children are watching the movie, it will
go right over their head," Catt said. "But every adult
knows what we're talking about. We believe we can deal with a
very sensitive subject without being graphic; that we can address
the issue without slapping people around with it or showing things
that are inappropriate. A family can still go and see this movie."
Catt is hoping churches get behind Fireproof just like
they got behind Facing the Giants. One significant role
churches and associations can play, he said, is by "buying
out" screens that is, purchasing all the tickets for
a particular showing. In doing that, churches often will be given
the freedom to talk to the audience after the film or even offer
an invitation. Officials also are urging smaller churches to team
up with other smaller churches in buying out screens.
Churches located in towns where the movie isn't scheduled to
be shown can buy out a theater and have it brought to their town;
generally it requires purchasing a minimum of one thousand tickets.
Sherwood Pictures officials are calling such groups that buy out
theaters "Action Squads." In 2006, it helped Facing
the Giants become a surprise hit and gross $10 million.
"The opening weekend is the key and is so critical,"
Catt said. "Unfortunately, we live in a society with movies
where it's market-driven and box-office driven. September 26 is
huge. That opening weekend determines how it spreads. We had a
great opening weekend with Facing the Giants, and so it
spread to other cities. We started in four hundred theaters and
ended up in over one thousand, and a lot of that was based on
what happened the first weekend, because it let people know this
is a legitimate film. The key to that was churches. The key to
that was pastors standing up in their pulpits and saying, 'We
gripe about Hollywood. Here's something positive. It's a film
we can go to and support.'"
Michael Foust is a member of Judson Baptist
Church in Nashville, Tennessee, and is an assistant editor for
Baptist Press.
For more information about Fireproof,
visit FireproofTheMovie.com. For resources, visit FireproofMyMarriage.com.
Fireproof: What Churches Can Do
Fireproof will offer churches a unique opportunity this
fall to underscore the importance of a biblical view of marriage.
It opens in theaters September 26, but churches already are
thinking ahead about ways they can use the movie to help their
congregation.
One Web site, FireproofMyMarriage.com, offers a host of resources
for churches, couples, and singles. Following are several ways
churches can use the movie and help promote it:
Buying all the tickets for a particular showing. In
many such instances, theater owners will allow pastors and church
leaders to address the audience before and after the movie if
they have purchased all the tickets. Additionally, if Fireproof
isn't scheduled to come to a particular city, churches can call
the local theater and offer to purchase one thousand tickets to
get it to come to their city. (For information, visit FireproofTheMovie.com
and click on "Take Action." Additional resources are
available at FireproofMyMarriage.com.)
Offering babysitting on a particular night promoting
it as a date night to allow couples with small children
to go see the movie.
Planning a sermon/sermon series on marriage to coincide
with the film's release.
Having Christian couples invite other couples to see
the movie together.
Giving movie tickets to local firefighters and encouraging
them to take their spouses.
Showing the movie's trailer to church members. (A link
for a free download is available through the FireproofMyMarriage.com
Web site. Click on "Churches," and then click "Click
Here for Fireproof Church Campaign Resources and Information."
Lastly, click on the "Free Fireproof Resources" banner.)
Placing Fireproof icons on the church's Web site.
(They can be downloaded at FireproofTheMovie.com. Click on "Free
Resources.")
Purchasing copies of The Love Dare book as seen
in the movie and giving it to church members. The paperback version
is scheduled to be released by B&H Publishing Group.
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Copyright
© 2008 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
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Nashville, Tennessee 37203
Tel. 615.244.2355
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