You are currently browsing the Religion Films weblog archives for January, 2008.
January 30, 2008 by Jim Spickard.
Film Title: God’s Angry Man — by Werner Herzog (1980) — 44 minutes
Distributor: ???????
Summary: A documentary about Dr. Gene Scott, televangelist, who used ranting anger to raise money on his nightly Festival of Faith. Tom Sutpen, in a review posted at Bright Lights Film Journal, writes:
A good deal of Herzog’s film is taken up with scenes of Scott live on the air, angrily rifling through pledges from viewers that were just called in — none of which are ever less than three figures — eventually flying into a hardcore Old Testament fury at the foul stinginess of the apostate public when he sees they haven’t coughed up that extra thousand he told them he needed. … In other hands, scenes like these would be used to advance the ever-fashionable cliché of television evangelists as mammon-obsessed charlatans…, but Herzog’s portrait of Dr. Gene Scott isn’t concerned with exposing hypocrisy … . God’s Angry Man is neither an exposé nor a malediction, and Scott is never branded a crackpot…. And for all his volcanic on-air bluster, he reveals a great deal of genuine vulnerability when he’s interviewed by Herzog.
Read the whole review here.
Posted in Televangelism, Evangelism, Evangelical Protestants, North America | Print | No Comments »
January 28, 2008 by Jim Spickard.
Film Title: Holy Ghost People, by Peter Adair (1967) — 57 minutes
Distributor: Available from GPod
Summary: Holy Ghost People describes the beliefs and practices of a snake-handling Pentecostal church and shows candid shots of the congregation during a service, including snake handling and glossolalia. In a dramatic ending, the leader is bitten by a rattlesnake.
For a longer review, see the above GPod link, which has posted most of a review by Gary Morris from: Bright Lights Film Journal. (Click here, then scroll down the page to find the full review.)
Posted in Pentecostals, Congregations, Christianity, Evangelical Protestants, Sects, North America | Print | No Comments »