CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.3/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Tras un gran escándalo, Trinitie Childs, la primera dama de una prominente mega Iglesia Bautista del Sur, intenta ayudar a su pastor-marido, Lee-Curtis Childs, a reconstruir su congregación.Tras un gran escándalo, Trinitie Childs, la primera dama de una prominente mega Iglesia Bautista del Sur, intenta ayudar a su pastor-marido, Lee-Curtis Childs, a reconstruir su congregación.Tras un gran escándalo, Trinitie Childs, la primera dama de una prominente mega Iglesia Bautista del Sur, intenta ayudar a su pastor-marido, Lee-Curtis Childs, a reconstruir su congregación.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Premios
- 2 premios ganados y 14 nominaciones en total
Greta Glenn
- Deaconess Culpepper
- (as Greta Marable Glenn)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
It wasn't a bad film but I was left wanting more from it. Sterling K. Brown and Regina Hall did absolutely fantastic in this film. They carried the film tremendously and keep the film interesting throughout. But I feel like the film just didn't know what it wanted to be. On one hand it was a comedy and the other it felt like a drama. Both could have worked alone and maybe together, but it didn't with this film to me. It could've been because walking into the film I thought it was going to be like What We Do In Thr Shadows or The Office but it wasn't. Overall it was a film with fantastic acting and a great concept but to me it had trouble finding out what it wanted to be and how to tell its story.
I'm not sure, but it seems like this movie was somewhat based on Eddie Long. Eddie Long was a pastor from Atlanta who had a few scandals.
I found a couple parts to be funny, but overall it wasn't good. I was surprised to see Sterling a part of a movie like this. It's nice to see him explore different roles. I gave four starts because I like Regina Hall and Sterling K. Brown.
Many people don't want to accept that many of the things that were portrayed in this movie occurs and have occurred in churches.
If you don't like people mocking religions or churches then this movie is NOT for you. If you don't care about religion or church, check it out you may like it.
I found a couple parts to be funny, but overall it wasn't good. I was surprised to see Sterling a part of a movie like this. It's nice to see him explore different roles. I gave four starts because I like Regina Hall and Sterling K. Brown.
Many people don't want to accept that many of the things that were portrayed in this movie occurs and have occurred in churches.
If you don't like people mocking religions or churches then this movie is NOT for you. If you don't care about religion or church, check it out you may like it.
Nobody likes hypocrites - unless, of course, they make good fodder for laughs, as is the case in this sidesplitting new comedy from writer-director Adamma Ebo. The target here is the hypocrisy often present in the bluster-filled fundamentalist megachurches, whose elaborate Sunday services play like big-budget Broadway productions and for which their pastors ask their congregations to fork over wads of cash - all in exchange for allegedly saved souls and their leaders' ability to live lives of grossly ostentatious affluence. Invariably, though, these schemes come with a catch in which their two-faced preachers get caught in career-ruining scandals that expose just how hypocritical and corrupt they really are. Such is what happens in this mockumentary-style offering about a once-big time Atlanta pastor and his "first lady" as they attempt to rebound from a fall from grace that rings all too familiar in the evangelist community. Filmmaker Ebo's debut feature pulls no punches in the picture's critically biting humor and in its periodic forays into dramatic material, moves meant to draw attention to the innate insincerity of its protagonists (and some of its parishioners). In doing so, the film straddles a fine line between comedy and drama, presenting a carefully concocted mix that works much of the time but occasionally becomes a little too heavy-handed for its own good. Nevertheless, "Honk For Jesus. Save Your Soul." makes an impact with its fine performances by Sterling K. Brown and Regina Hall, as well as its wickedly delicious wit and ample sight gags, elements that will have viewers delightfully giggling with glee. This one might not have you on your knees, but you might easily fall over laughing.
I expected it to be funny or thought provoking. There were moments that it was. Is it about a marriage, the church, religion exploitation, sex abuse? I dont know. Not very satisfying to watch mostly.
The tone was also inconsistent for me. At times quirky, ridiculous, at times serious, but not a point that defined the film.
The documentary style was good at first, but later it became gimmicky.
The thing that saved it for me was the performance of the two lead. Regina Hall was great and Sterling K Brown gave a very convincing performance as a self centered, egotistic, but charismatic pastor. Those who go to church might recognize the type.
The tone was also inconsistent for me. At times quirky, ridiculous, at times serious, but not a point that defined the film.
The documentary style was good at first, but later it became gimmicky.
The thing that saved it for me was the performance of the two lead. Regina Hall was great and Sterling K Brown gave a very convincing performance as a self centered, egotistic, but charismatic pastor. Those who go to church might recognize the type.
Set in Atlanta, Georgia, a husband and wife team of pastors consisting of Lee-Curtis (Sterling K. Brown) and Trinitie Childs (Regina Hall) operate the Wander to Greater Paths Baptist megachurch which has brought them great wealth and fame and at their apex had 25,000 congregants. Following allegations of sexual behavior done by Lee-Curtis, the church has been temporarily closed as the Childs have tried to ride out the fallout and settle with the accusers. The Childs enlists the aid of a documentary crew to follow them around as they attempt to revitalize the church and Lee-Curtis' image, however a rising star Baptist church, Heaven's House run by Shakura (Nicole Beharie) and Keon Sumpter (Conphidance) is positioned for a major opening the same day as Wander to Greater Paths' reopening.
Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul is the feature deubt of Adamma Ebo whose previous credits are short films. The movie is an adaptation of her 2018 short film of the same name following the same plot, but is now given a major remake with behind the scenes support from Daniel Kaluuya and Jordan Peele who are executive producers as their companies 59% Productions and Monkeypaw Productions are listed producers on the film. Debuting simultaneously in theaters and Universal's Peacock streaming service, I wasn't all that sure what to expect of the film but was mildly intrigued by the premise having watched the original short film prior to my viewing. Unfortunately what was good material for a short film struggles to be substantive enough to justify a 100 minute runtime.
Assuming you've seen the original short film, the film follows many of the major plot and comedic beats that were present in the original short albeit remixed ever so slightly so some may happen sooner or later in relation to others as to not make this a complete 1:1. With a greatly expanded budget from what Ebo worked with on the original short she does get a little more ambitious such as playing with the aspect ratio and using 4:3 footage that's been mocked up to look like a megachurch telecast, and we're also given a greater view of the opulence and excess in which the Childs live with both the Childs espousing empty religious platitudes whilst showing off their expensive fashions, foreign luxury cars, and elaborate mansion that runs counter to many of their biblical teachings in some solid enough satire even if the two sitting on gilded thrones as seen on the poster maybe throws a little too much subtlety out the window.
However despite us getting to see more of Lee-Childs and Trinitie than we did in the short we never really learn much more about them than we did in the short with many of the scenes that have been added more or less variations on the same point and additions like the Childs five remaining parishioners or the sub-plot of a rival Baptist church stealing their congregation don't really add much. The movie kind of keeps the mockumentary format used in the short as the setup and premise is more or less the same between both, but in a rather strange decision the Mockumentary format isn't consistently applied and there are many scenes where no cameras are present and they're presented as a straight forward narrative which breaks the verisimilitude of the presentation, not that the format is used all that well as the key comic bits used in the short are all revisited and while they were funny in mockumentary format, when they're presented in straightforward narrative style it makes gags that were awkwardly funny too self-aware with usage of non-diegetic sound and that robs a few scenes of the comic punch they once had. The movie also strangely tries to make Trinite and Lee-Curtis more sympathetic than they were in the original short down to removing the original context in the short that the act in question was with a minor and I'm honestly not sure why Ebo did this because it places the Childs in this weird gray zone where they're not hateful enough to be laughed at but they're also too unlikable to be seen as underdogs making the whole thing come off pretty depressing.
Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul unfortunately is not a good debut for Adamma Ebo and if you are curious in seeing this film I recommend just watching the original short as it contains the best parts in the movie anyway. I think Ebo has promise as a filmmaker and the movie is competently made, but perhaps she needs a co-writer to help her flesh out her ideas in the future.
Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul is the feature deubt of Adamma Ebo whose previous credits are short films. The movie is an adaptation of her 2018 short film of the same name following the same plot, but is now given a major remake with behind the scenes support from Daniel Kaluuya and Jordan Peele who are executive producers as their companies 59% Productions and Monkeypaw Productions are listed producers on the film. Debuting simultaneously in theaters and Universal's Peacock streaming service, I wasn't all that sure what to expect of the film but was mildly intrigued by the premise having watched the original short film prior to my viewing. Unfortunately what was good material for a short film struggles to be substantive enough to justify a 100 minute runtime.
Assuming you've seen the original short film, the film follows many of the major plot and comedic beats that were present in the original short albeit remixed ever so slightly so some may happen sooner or later in relation to others as to not make this a complete 1:1. With a greatly expanded budget from what Ebo worked with on the original short she does get a little more ambitious such as playing with the aspect ratio and using 4:3 footage that's been mocked up to look like a megachurch telecast, and we're also given a greater view of the opulence and excess in which the Childs live with both the Childs espousing empty religious platitudes whilst showing off their expensive fashions, foreign luxury cars, and elaborate mansion that runs counter to many of their biblical teachings in some solid enough satire even if the two sitting on gilded thrones as seen on the poster maybe throws a little too much subtlety out the window.
However despite us getting to see more of Lee-Childs and Trinitie than we did in the short we never really learn much more about them than we did in the short with many of the scenes that have been added more or less variations on the same point and additions like the Childs five remaining parishioners or the sub-plot of a rival Baptist church stealing their congregation don't really add much. The movie kind of keeps the mockumentary format used in the short as the setup and premise is more or less the same between both, but in a rather strange decision the Mockumentary format isn't consistently applied and there are many scenes where no cameras are present and they're presented as a straight forward narrative which breaks the verisimilitude of the presentation, not that the format is used all that well as the key comic bits used in the short are all revisited and while they were funny in mockumentary format, when they're presented in straightforward narrative style it makes gags that were awkwardly funny too self-aware with usage of non-diegetic sound and that robs a few scenes of the comic punch they once had. The movie also strangely tries to make Trinite and Lee-Curtis more sympathetic than they were in the original short down to removing the original context in the short that the act in question was with a minor and I'm honestly not sure why Ebo did this because it places the Childs in this weird gray zone where they're not hateful enough to be laughed at but they're also too unlikable to be seen as underdogs making the whole thing come off pretty depressing.
Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul unfortunately is not a good debut for Adamma Ebo and if you are curious in seeing this film I recommend just watching the original short as it contains the best parts in the movie anyway. I think Ebo has promise as a filmmaker and the movie is competently made, but perhaps she needs a co-writer to help her flesh out her ideas in the future.
Sterling K. Brown & Regina Hall Ask Each Other Anything
Sterling K. Brown & Regina Hall Ask Each Other Anything
Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul. stars Sterling K. Brown and Regina Hall ask each other how they built their Southern Baptist Mega Church personas, what their first impressions of each other were, and more.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaDifferent aspect ratios are used, sometimes within the same scene, to differentiate between "real life" (2.35:1) and the documentary (1.66:1); in addition to 1.37:1 for "archive" footage.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- 為上帝鳴喇叭:耶穌拯救你的靈魂
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 2,561,270
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 1,422,615
- 4 sep 2022
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 2,561,270
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 46 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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