IMDb RATING
5.5/10
3.6K
YOUR RATING
Dying mother Sarah tells her elder son Drew that her last wish is for him to take his younger brother Will to the place they were born. Despite tragic family history, hope gives promise to t... Read allDying mother Sarah tells her elder son Drew that her last wish is for him to take his younger brother Will to the place they were born. Despite tragic family history, hope gives promise to the future.Dying mother Sarah tells her elder son Drew that her last wish is for him to take his younger brother Will to the place they were born. Despite tragic family history, hope gives promise to the future.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Spencer Folmar
- Jeff the Waiter
- (as Spencer T. Folmar)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Nothing original here you know already how it ends up after 5 min of watching. Boring, I really don't understand the 8.2 rating?!?!
From the title I thought it was a kind of challenge to religion of similar story related to it which is very much a popular topic nowadays. The truth is: It's just an attempt to produce a feeling good movie: go to Church and solve all your problems. Good luck.
I wouldn't recommend it.
From the title I thought it was a kind of challenge to religion of similar story related to it which is very much a popular topic nowadays. The truth is: It's just an attempt to produce a feeling good movie: go to Church and solve all your problems. Good luck.
I wouldn't recommend it.
Its a bit below-average film I fell in believing the 7.5-non deserved-score
This is an anti-drugs film made for highscoolers educators to try to fit in a message for "the masses". Only instead of drugs is lack of faith and how God is the answer.
Don't watch it if you don't enjoy being a christian.
This is an anti-drugs film made for highscoolers educators to try to fit in a message for "the masses". Only instead of drugs is lack of faith and how God is the answer.
Don't watch it if you don't enjoy being a christian.
10zjcoble
A fantastic film about dealing with demons and eventually being saved by grace. I can't recommend it enough. It's a grittier take than you might be accustomed to, but I really think that helps to drive home the point that you can be saved by God's grace no matter how far you stray or what you've done. This is a raw take on hitting rock bottom, only to be saved by God's amazing love.
Its a tv drama with religiosity. If you like films about redemption and coming to terms then you might enjoy it.
Generational Sins is deep. It's the story of a family ripped apart by sins and struggling to put itself back together.
Most Christian films fall flat on their faces as overstated, obvious, and safe. Generational Sins is not like most Christian films. It paints the ugliness of life as it truly is, strong language and all. God's in it but you wouldn't be able to play this film on a Sunday morning.
The script uses silence well. And Daniel's acting job is superb. With such an emotional role, it easily could have crossed into "cheesy" many times, but Daniel's voice, face, and body control kept the scenes believable. Good job to him.
I wish from the bottom of my heart that future Christian filmmakers would take a page out of Generational Sins' playbook. Why censor real life? The Bible didn't. Unchristians don't. Last time I checked, Christianity isn't a G-rated perfect white world lived on a cloud. It's for the real messiness of life, the hard family situations, and the only treatment for the untameable animal inside each one of us.
Generational Sins isn't an entertaining comedy if that's what you're looking for. It's a statement about the jagged edges of life from an angle that needs more representation in this industry and age.
Most Christian films fall flat on their faces as overstated, obvious, and safe. Generational Sins is not like most Christian films. It paints the ugliness of life as it truly is, strong language and all. God's in it but you wouldn't be able to play this film on a Sunday morning.
The script uses silence well. And Daniel's acting job is superb. With such an emotional role, it easily could have crossed into "cheesy" many times, but Daniel's voice, face, and body control kept the scenes believable. Good job to him.
I wish from the bottom of my heart that future Christian filmmakers would take a page out of Generational Sins' playbook. Why censor real life? The Bible didn't. Unchristians don't. Last time I checked, Christianity isn't a G-rated perfect white world lived on a cloud. It's for the real messiness of life, the hard family situations, and the only treatment for the untameable animal inside each one of us.
Generational Sins isn't an entertaining comedy if that's what you're looking for. It's a statement about the jagged edges of life from an angle that needs more representation in this industry and age.
Did you know
- TriviaThe prop car was once left with the keys in the ignition and windows down on a previous set for over 48 hours in Clearfield, Pennsylvania.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Nesillerin Günahı
- Filming locations
- Clearfield, Pennsylvania, USA(location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1 hour, 30 minutes
- Sound mix
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