The first trailer for Shooting Heroin, a film about vigilantes who take it upon themselves to rid their town of the drug pushers who are targeting their loved ones, has been released.
The movie, which targets a mainstream audience, comes from the same filmmakers behind Generational Sins, a 2017 faith-based movie notable for its heavy use of profanity, something typically shunned by others who target Christian moviegoers.
Writer-director Spencer Folmar put Shooting Heroin on the fast track late last year and recently finished shooting in order to take advantage of the timeliness of the opioid crisis, which President Donald Trump has ...
The movie, which targets a mainstream audience, comes from the same filmmakers behind Generational Sins, a 2017 faith-based movie notable for its heavy use of profanity, something typically shunned by others who target Christian moviegoers.
Writer-director Spencer Folmar put Shooting Heroin on the fast track late last year and recently finished shooting in order to take advantage of the timeliness of the opioid crisis, which President Donald Trump has ...
The first trailer for Shooting Heroin, a film about vigilantes who take it upon themselves to rid their town of the drug pushers who are targeting their loved ones, has been released.
The movie, which targets a mainstream audience, comes from the same filmmakers behind Generational Sins, a 2017 faith-based movie notable for its heavy use of profanity, something typically shunned by others who target Christian moviegoers.
Writer-director Spencer Folmar put Shooting Heroin on the fast track late last year and recently finished shooting in order to take advantage of the timeliness of the opioid crisis, which President Donald Trump has ...
The movie, which targets a mainstream audience, comes from the same filmmakers behind Generational Sins, a 2017 faith-based movie notable for its heavy use of profanity, something typically shunned by others who target Christian moviegoers.
Writer-director Spencer Folmar put Shooting Heroin on the fast track late last year and recently finished shooting in order to take advantage of the timeliness of the opioid crisis, which President Donald Trump has ...
Spencer T. Folmar’s faith-based drama has gotten some attention because of its foul language and disturbing themes including alcoholism and child abuse. But despite those potentially provocative elements (provocative, at least, for the genre), Generational Sins proves a dull, sluggish effort that doesn’t avoid a single cliche. Notable only for Daniel MacPherson’s strong performance in the central role, the film should please neither those looking for secular nor religious fare.
The story concerns two siblings: the bitter, angry Drew (MacPherson) and his happy-go-lucky, rakish younger brother Will (Dax Spanogle, who also co-wrote the screenplay). The prologue, set twenty years in...
The story concerns two siblings: the bitter, angry Drew (MacPherson) and his happy-go-lucky, rakish younger brother Will (Dax Spanogle, who also co-wrote the screenplay). The prologue, set twenty years in...
- 10/6/2017
- by Frank Scheck
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Estranged relatives often can’t find redemption and forgiveness in each other until they embark on a journey that emotionally and positively affects them both. That’s certainly the case for the two recently reunited brothers in the upcoming drama, ‘Generational Sins.’ The siblings are struggling to contend with, and overcome, their shared pained history in the […]
The post Daniel MacPherson and Dax Spanogle Ponder Generational Sins in Drama’s Exclusive Clip appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post Daniel MacPherson and Dax Spanogle Ponder Generational Sins in Drama’s Exclusive Clip appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 10/4/2017
- by Karen Benardello
- ShockYa
Are Christian movies going blue? Generational Sins, in theaters Oct. 6 via Freestyle Digital Media, is rated PG-13 and contains 32 profanities — not unusual except that Sins is a faith-based movie.
Call them "Hard Faith" films, says writer-director Spencer Folmar, who is trademarking the phrase and whose banner, Third Brother Films, has more such movies in the works, including one based on Johnny Cash's The Beast in Me.
The faith-based Dove Foundation, which stamps its seal of approval on family-friendly movies, recently named Sins its first recommendation in its new category for viewers ages 18 and up. The movie,...
Call them "Hard Faith" films, says writer-director Spencer Folmar, who is trademarking the phrase and whose banner, Third Brother Films, has more such movies in the works, including one based on Johnny Cash's The Beast in Me.
The faith-based Dove Foundation, which stamps its seal of approval on family-friendly movies, recently named Sins its first recommendation in its new category for viewers ages 18 and up. The movie,...
- 9/27/2017
- by Paul Bond
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Generational Sins, a faith-based movie that — rather remarkably — contains 32 expletives, has struck a distribution deal with Freestyle Digital Media, which plans to release the film theatrically and digitally on Oct. 6.
Freestyle, which also distributed the surprise hit God's Not Dead in 2014, is owned by comedian Byron Allen's Entertainment Studios.
Generational Sins, produced by Third Brother Films and directed by Spencer Folmar, has raised eyebrows among some fans of the Christian film genre because of the copious amount of swearing. The movie is about estranged brothers who try to honor their mother's dying wish by...
Freestyle, which also distributed the surprise hit God's Not Dead in 2014, is owned by comedian Byron Allen's Entertainment Studios.
Generational Sins, produced by Third Brother Films and directed by Spencer Folmar, has raised eyebrows among some fans of the Christian film genre because of the copious amount of swearing. The movie is about estranged brothers who try to honor their mother's dying wish by...
- 7/12/2017
- by Paul Bond
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
An upcoming faith-based film is attempting to go where no previous movie from the genre has ever gone.
Generational Sins — directed by Spencer T. Folmar and written by Folmar, Dax Spanogle, Jason Spanogle, Casey Salviano and Fernando Salviano — is overflowing with profanity, including multiple uses of "f—," "shit," "bitch," "dick" and "ass."
It's a huge departure compared to recent faith-based successes like God's Not Dead, which took in $60 million in 2014 and contained just one objectionable word: "crap." Generational Sins is about child abuse, alcoholism and, ultimately, redemption through Jesus Christ, and it could be in the...
Generational Sins — directed by Spencer T. Folmar and written by Folmar, Dax Spanogle, Jason Spanogle, Casey Salviano and Fernando Salviano — is overflowing with profanity, including multiple uses of "f—," "shit," "bitch," "dick" and "ass."
It's a huge departure compared to recent faith-based successes like God's Not Dead, which took in $60 million in 2014 and contained just one objectionable word: "crap." Generational Sins is about child abuse, alcoholism and, ultimately, redemption through Jesus Christ, and it could be in the...
- 5/11/2017
- by Paul Bond
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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