Cathardincu
Surprisingly incoherent and boring
Stometer
Save your money for something good and enjoyable
SpuffyWeb
Sadly Over-hyped
Matylda Swan
It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties.
Desertman84
Left Behind is a Christian movie based on the novel of the same title by Reverend Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins.This apocalyptic thriller stars Kirk Cameron, Brad Johnson, Gordon Currie and Clarence Gilyard. This film directed by Vic Sarin is the first of the Left Behind trilogy that was followed by Left Behind II: Tribulation Force and Left Behind: World at War.Rayford Steele is an airline pilot whose marriage is on the rocks after her wife has decided to spend most of her time in the church.This resulted in an affair with a fellow stewardess,Hattie.In their flight towards London,a number of their passengers disappear for no apparent reason and a number of chaotic events happen in the world.We also meet other characters along the way such as Buck Williams, a television journalist, is pondering the rash of sudden disappearances as he works on a report about Dr. Chaim Rosenzweig, an Israeli scientist who has devised a formula that would make any soil on earth easy to cultivate. Too bad that this movie resulted into becoming a poor one.Instead of trying to send the message of the coming apocalyptic events such as the end of the world,its poor writing and performances resulted into unintended ridiculous film-making due to poor writing,dialogues between characters and performances from the actors.Too bad that a Christian movie like this imparts messages that is far from what Jesus thought his follower and the Biblical scripture-based events that would happen as stated in the Book of Revelations turned out to become an unintended action thriller.A better remake was tried last year but it only resulted to worse film instead of a better film adaptation.
sethdhanson
I'm about 40 minutes in, and it's easily my favorite awful movie. The writing is so deliriously bad. The filmmakers should have had a non-delusional person look at the screenplay. I wouldn't be shocked to find out there was a key-grip or two fired for voicing their opinion on this horrendous script. Kirk Cameron's wife is really beautiful. Kirk Cameron is a tool. I don't believe in any of the hogwash that this movie depicts, so that might be part of the reason that I dislike it, but ultimately the content is no reason to give a bad review, like the people who gave Noah bad reviews because they were Christian dopes and actually believed it was based on real events.
Arthur Vandelay
This comedy tries to have all the gravitas of the 1978 film Attack of the Killer Tomatoes! to offset the insane premise the script offers up, but fails to deliver. This is due to the weak script, which both fails in dialog and plot, as well as acting that would put community theatre to shame.In a movie like this you need Shatner-esque levels of scenery chewing overacting in a lead, something that a washed up 1980s sitcom star cannot deliver.If the writing and acting isn't bad enough the cinematography and editing are amateur at best. Was this shot and edited by interns working for college credit and meals? It seems like it.All of that coupled with an absurdest script, which apparently is based on two best selling fiction books, makes this train wreck of a film not even worth the camp value for comedy.Apparently this is supposed to be some sort of cult film, but it seems more like a film produced by a cult.If you want to watch an absurd comedy watch the cult movie they were apparently trying to shoot for - Attack of the Killer Tomatoes!
utgard14
Intrepid journalist Buck Williams (Kirk Cameron) is on board a flight when several of the passengers just disappear, leaving their clothes behind. Looks like the Rapture is upon us and all true believers have been taken to Heaven, leaving the sinners behind with the Anti-Christ (Gordon Currie with a laughable accent).Obviously a movie that will alienate some based on its concept. I have no dog in the hunt one way or the other. Objectively, this is about the level of quality one would expect from a low-budget film that attempts to tackle the apocalypse. That is to say it fails more than it succeeds. The acting is limited and the direction inept. Do I even need to bother with the script? The only halfway decent acting is from Brad Johnson. The rest is strictly amateur hour.