Went to go see
Jesus Revolution, largely because I was looking for an excuse to leave the house and there wasn't anything better playing. My presence is the sparsely attended theater probably pulled the mean age of the attendees down to a ripe forty-five at the youngest. As one could probably glean from the title of the movie and the trailers, the film is about the so-called Jesus Movement of the 1960s and 1970s, with Jesus Freaks and
Jesus Music. To me the film seemed like essentially a nostalgia piece; the entire movement and the people involved are dealt with very uncritically, probably due in no small part to the movie being based on a book by the preacher Greg Laurie. Laurie, who was involved in the real movement, knew several of the figures who show up in the movie and himself is one of the main characters. From around the thirty minute mark of the movie, or thereabouts, the stubborn and judgmental pastor Chuck Smith has one conversation with Jesus-loving hippie Lonnie Frisbee and becomes instantly convinced to turn his church into a hippie ministry with very little real resistance. From that point on it's pretty much positive things coming out of the Jesus Movement with only a little bit of drama resulting from tensions between the various people in the movement. Nothing actually bad or disastrous happens, and while I don't think something bad or disastrous needs to have happened in the movie to make it good, it definitely seems like a sanitized account of the time period. The homosexual behavior of Lonnie Frisbee and his eventual death from AIDS, for example, are conspicuously absent from the film.
As I left the theater an old gentleman with a long gray beard, bell bottom jeans, and a tie-dye shirt asked me what I thought of the film. I didn't have the heart to tell the old man that I didn't think particularly high of it, though it truth I didn't hate it. I'm sure in the old man's case watching the movie brought back plenty of fond memories. Maybe you just had to be there to get it.