Greg and Nelson are two complete opposites on a mission to complete their Home Teaching on the last day of the month--even if it kills them.Greg and Nelson are two complete opposites on a mission to complete their Home Teaching on the last day of the month--even if it kills them.Greg and Nelson are two complete opposites on a mission to complete their Home Teaching on the last day of the month--even if it kills them.
Deborah Ellis
- Sister Cooper
- (as Debbie Ellis)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Possibly the worst of the current sub-genre of LDS cinema
This movie is one of the worst of the current sub-genre of LDS films (films made by Mormons and catering to a Mormon audience). The best of the lot were The Best Two Years and The Singles Ward. This is worse than Out of Step or Pride and Prejudice. It would not make a good seminary video and makes the lame Tom Trails series of the early seventies look like great film making. All of the characters are shallow stereotypes and one gag wonders. If you are careful, you can see all of the laughs approaching and will not be surprised by any of the sight gags or attempts at jokes. This was an amateur film that should never have played in theatres.
Mormon movies are fantastic
These movies are hidden gems, my family loves Church Ball, down and derby, inspired guns, the unitards and this one, the home teachers. I always bring a new one to our family get togethers at our lake home and everyone finds them entertaining. Another movie we love is heaven bound with Torrey Martin, it's a classic. We love these family friendly comedies with a faith element in them and the comedic lines you can repeat over and over again. I'm glad I stumbled upon church ball which in turn helped me find all these other comedy gold movies that are rare unless you seek them out, don't just watch what your Roku recommends or what's in theaters, there are a lot of great movies out there that are clean and incredibly enjoyable. The home teachers doesn't disappoint.
10blane13
Uproariously Funny!
Kurt Hale and John Moyer's look into typical Mormon life shows humor in what most LDS people experience on a monthly basis. This comedy is life with physical humor on par with "Tommy Boy".
It is refreshing to see a movie that the whole family can enjoy and laugh at. The writer and director created a comedy without resorting to crude or morally debasing material.
This takes place in one day at the end of the month. Murphy visits these two bumbling home teachers every moment in everything they do as they attempt to visit 3 families.
A great ride!
It is refreshing to see a movie that the whole family can enjoy and laugh at. The writer and director created a comedy without resorting to crude or morally debasing material.
This takes place in one day at the end of the month. Murphy visits these two bumbling home teachers every moment in everything they do as they attempt to visit 3 families.
A great ride!
Deceptive tactics?
I'm not LDS or familiar with the religion beyond NBA player Shawn Bradley and former NFL players Jim McMahon and Steve Young. (If that's even accurate.)
And I don't know if the filmmakers are to blame for the deception I'm about to describe either. All those disclaimers out of the way...
My girlfriend and I were renting movies at Blockbuster, looking for a comedy that her little brother (10) could watch with us. She came across "The Home
Teachers," and we rented it despite our being unable to recognize any of the
"stars." Important note: There was NOTHING on the box that denoted this movie was about LDS.
So imagine our surprise when we get home, pop in the video, and see the
previews for other "Mormon movies," followed by the opening scene with the
blond guy sitting in a Bible class. (We gave up on it after seeing his cliched attempts to evade the straitlaced guy.)
Nothing against the filmmakers--unless they were willing participants in this deception. I'm sure they wanted to make a funny movie that LDS folks could
enjoy. But there should have been some mention on the original movie box or
the Blockbuster box, stating that this was a Mormon movie. Especially if this was an intentional omission in order to be an undercover venue for
proselytizing.
Oh well, there's four bucks I'll never see again.
And I don't know if the filmmakers are to blame for the deception I'm about to describe either. All those disclaimers out of the way...
My girlfriend and I were renting movies at Blockbuster, looking for a comedy that her little brother (10) could watch with us. She came across "The Home
Teachers," and we rented it despite our being unable to recognize any of the
"stars." Important note: There was NOTHING on the box that denoted this movie was about LDS.
So imagine our surprise when we get home, pop in the video, and see the
previews for other "Mormon movies," followed by the opening scene with the
blond guy sitting in a Bible class. (We gave up on it after seeing his cliched attempts to evade the straitlaced guy.)
Nothing against the filmmakers--unless they were willing participants in this deception. I'm sure they wanted to make a funny movie that LDS folks could
enjoy. But there should have been some mention on the original movie box or
the Blockbuster box, stating that this was a Mormon movie. Especially if this was an intentional omission in order to be an undercover venue for
proselytizing.
Oh well, there's four bucks I'll never see again.
Lot's of fun and pretty brainless!
I am LDS but my husband is not. We rented this video so that he could see how "peculiar" a people we LDs really are. He loved it! He thought that it was one of the funniest things he had ever seen. I also love "The Best Two Years" and "The RM" and hope to show these movies to him also. These videos can open up dialog about particulars of LDS doctrine and practices in a relaxed way with people who aren't LDS. I recommend them. YES, they are not the pinnacles of cinematic production--- they aren't meant to be. This movie was meant to be watched by the whole family and to both poke fun at LDS life and to praise it. The characters are flawed but recognizable and the situation is so typical to Mormons that the crazy antics of the main characters are really laughable. ;j
Did you know
- TriviaThe Home Teaching program was introduced to the Mormon or LDS Church in 1963, announced by the church leader President David O. McKay. It was practiced for 55 years, with two-man teams home-teaching Mormon families once a month. Then in April 2018, General Conference, the church leader President Russell M. Nelson officially announced that the home-teaching program would be retired and be replaced with a program called Ministering, which serves family members' needs.
- ConnectionsReferenced in It's Latter-Day Night! Live Comedy (2003)
- SoundtracksNearer, My God, To Thee
Written by Sarah F. Adams and Lowell Mason
Performed by The Rockamatics
Courtesy of Tim Fullmer and Flying Pig Records
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $425,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $203,917
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $47,494
- Jan 11, 2004
- Gross worldwide
- $203,917
- Runtime
- 1h 22m(82 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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