52 Films Directed By Women Vol 1: 47. MIRACLES FROM HEAVEN (Director: Patricia Riggen)
Miracles from Heaven
is the first Christian faith-based film I have seen, discounting The Passion of the Christ, which is torture
porn with subtitles. Traditionally, these movies are independently financed and
deal either with the impending apocalypse represented by a flood, famine,
plague of locusts, earthquake or a major star in bad make-up. Latterly, they
deal with a confirmation of faith. A terrible tragedy has befallen a family.
All seems lost. Science fails. Faith is tested but then a deus ex machina shows
up. There is a chorus singing. Everyone is happy. Uplift – roll credits.
Faith-based movies are traditionally made by men because in
the Bible there are few great roles for women – Madonna or whore, you know the
drill. So Miracles from Heaven is a
curiosity. Could director Patricia Riggen, whose previous credits include Under the Same Moon, Lemonade Mouth, Girl
in Progress and The 33 bring
anything new to the genre?
The answer is an abiding ‘no’. She does a good job sticking
to the formula and her film has grossed USD 61 million in the United States
alone – the production budget was USD 13 million. But her film doesn’t
transcend it. It is not simultaneously a film that appeals to Christians and
makes them asks questions about the world view that they promote.
What is the formula? First of all, the title, which tells
you that there will be a Happy Ending and the words will be capitalised. Heaven is for Real is one such example.
The titles don’t conceal what the film is about any more than The Exorcism of Emily Rose does.
Faith-based films sit in direct opposition to the horror film, where the
problem stems from within the characters or society by is represented as a
demon. In faith-based movies, the problem is external, in this case, Paris.
Ten year old Anna Beam (Kylie Rogers) desperately wants to
go to the French capital with her mom, Christy (Jennifer Garner). Her older
sister excels at soccer. Her younger sister likes pizza. They live on a ranch
and keep cows and four dogs, though the latter rarely appear. If we don’t see
dogs, how do we know they are really there? But then Anna develops stomach
cramps. Her belly distends. She is told she is lactose intolerant, has problems
with her acids as she can’t keep down her food. She suffers from a full
intestinal obstruction. The only specialist works at Boston’s Children’s
Hospital and has a nine-month waiting list (not to mention an Elmo tie). After
failing to secure an appointment, Christy flies out with Anna to see him,
appealing to his mercy.
In real life – and Miracles
from Heaven is based on a true story – Anna was five years old when she was
diagnosed and endured four years of failed treatment before the miracle
occurred. But this is a Hollywood film, produced by Sony Pictures Affirm
division (as opposed to the ‘Deny’ division that produced its upcoming Ghostbusters reboot) and it shortens
the timeline so the lead actress doesn’t have to miss so much school.
The set-up may be offensive for another reason. In faith-based movies, people want for nothing. They have jobs, families and communities. They don’t have a problem with big government. The police aren’t even there and no one talks about ‘Netflix and chill’ or Game of Thrones. The sudden medical problem is a threat and it is there to demonstrate the limits of science, or human endeavour. We don’t know everything. What we need to do is place our faith in something bigger than ourselves. In real life, many people want for many things. People cover their neighbour’s partners or deal with their gender identity or are discriminated against or believe they need a gun.
Reviewed on Sunday 12 June 2016, Cineworld West India Quay, East London
Originally published on Bitlanders.com
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