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Jesus Camp [DVD]
 
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Jesus Camp [DVD]

Heidi Ewing , Rachel Grady    Suitable for 12 years and over   DVD
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
Price: £5.99 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Directors: Heidi Ewing, Rachel Grady
  • Format: PAL
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 12
  • Studio: ICA Films
  • DVD Release Date: 9 Jun 2008
  • Run Time: 87 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0015FWO1W
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 9,595 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Product Description

A powerful and absorbing documentary from film-makers Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady (who made 2005's brilliant film about inner-city children's lives, The Boys of Baraka). Oscar-nominated Jesus Camp delves into the goings-on at the Kids on Fire evangelical camp in North Dakota, where children spend their summer playing Christian combat games, speaking in tongues and weeping with ecstasy as they confirm their love for Jesus. The camp's founder explains her mission to encourage the kids to 'take back America for Christ', and while there are opposing views on screen the film never takes sides, making the experience even more fascinating and disturbing.

Review

A documentary that's funny, sad and horrifying in about equal measure. **** --Empire

Brave, thoughtful documentary. **** --Time Out

Powerful, sad and very worrying. **** --The Independent

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
37 of 39 people found the following review helpful
Frightening 7 May 2008
Format:DVD
There's been a certain amount of debate about whether the portrayal of evangelical Christianity in this film is fair or accurate. It's hard to see how much there is to complain about in this respect since most of the film simply consists of pointing a camera at what's happening. Obviously it's possible for film-makers to subtlely affect your perceptions of what's happening through their editing and the use of music and so on, so perhaps we should be aware of that. However, one thing is abundantly clear. What's happening here is utterly, utterly sick. If you can watch this film and not feel angry about what you see happening then something has happened to desensitise you to the bullying and manipulation of children, and you should be worried about yourself as well as them.

The film centres around Becky Fischer's "Kids on Fire" camp where children go to get "fired up" for Jesus, and they certainly do get fired up. They're given very little choice when Becky Fischer is screaming at them that they are essentially bad or weak people if they're not willing to get fired up for Jesus. She talks about how some children may have been living a double-life, believing one thing on a Sunday and living differently when they're at school. She says that to live this way makes them phonies and hypocrites and she works them up into an anguished state about their need to be forgiven for these "sins". These children seem genuinely distressed and many of them cry. There are a number of clips where the children explain "their" philosophies about things and it is perfectly clear that they could not have come to these kinds of conclusions independently. They have clearly had their heads filled with various ideas about what is good and what is evil, what God wants and even "what kind of churches he is likely to turn up at". They are encouraged to mock evolution and any other theories of science which conflict with the Bible.

Of course the real villains here are the adults, people like Becky Fischer and Ted Haggard. Becky Fischer is simply a bully and a scaremonger and she clearly has no respect for other people. She only wishes to instill "the truth" into children's minds without any consideration of whether she has the right to interfere with them in this way. Ted Haggard however is an utter creep. When I saw him talking to a young boy called Levi who was an aspiring preacher I desparately wanted to tell him to get away from him. His bitterness and cynicism were plainly evident and it was horrible to hear the way he was speaking to this young boy. However this young boy clearly chose to overlook the wierdness of Haggard's attitude because he's been taught that anyone who preaches Jesus has to be a good guy.

There are a few moments in this film which will make you laugh, such as the lamentable Christian hip-hop used at one of the meetings - "hey homie, we're kicking it for Christ", and Becky Fischer solemnly commanding the devil not to interfere with her powerpoint presentation. Mostly though you'll probably find yourself laughing to avoid crying. These people have lost all perspective about everything, and they're riding the train to insanityville. A situation like this can only end badly for all concerned, especially the children who obviously believe what they're being told and are willing to stake their lives on it. There's so much that's wrong with what's happening here that you could write a book on it, so it's hard to do justice to it in a short review. All I would say is that there should be some way of holding these people to account. They have no right to do the things they're doing and these children need to be protected from this madness. Let's keep speaking out against this woeful abuse of children and hope that we may be able to make a difference.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
By eeeaye
Format:DVD
I actually thought this was a great documentary. The topic aside, I felt like the filmmakers, Ewing and Grady, had really done their research, and I was surprised by how extensive their interviews were. There were maybe three or four children that they focussed on and all of them were interviewed in their own environments, in a place where they obviously felt comfortable. They were all given a chance to say their piece, as was the preacher, Becky Fischner.

I have to admit, there were a few moments when I wondered if I was being manipulated into thinking and feeling a certain way. One scene springs to mind, when during a sermon, there was a wailing, somewhat melodramatic music/song happening. Just as I was thinking that it was a cheat-like of the filmmakers to add a dramatic score over a relatively dramatic shot, the camera panned left and there was a woman wailing into a microphone, which I presume is supposed to help bring the children to religious ecstacy. So that just sort of told me that it wasn't neccessarily the filmmakers doing the manipulating.

As another reviewer said, they seem to be just pointing the camera and shooting, with no obvious enhancements for dramatic effect. I can only appreciate that, as by the end I felt that I was mostly able to decide for myself. The film is in no way unbiased, but then the subjects within the film could hardly be considered unbiased.

In terms of the topic, I thought it was a good one to cover in a world where we mostly seem to focus on Islamic fundamentalism. We seem to forget that there are many other religions out there with their own special branches of people who are taking it too far.

I think the thing that I found most compelling was the fact that the preacher seemed to really believe what she was saying. She spoke with such conviction that I could see how people would be easily swayed by her, particularly children. I think that frightened me more than anything. Her passion was almost alarming, that is until we got to the kids.

The kids were disturbing. They were all so serious and adult like. At one point a twelve year old boy told the preacher that at the age of five, he was depressed and thought there was nothing more to life until he heard the word of God. Well, the preacher was pleased at any rate. Myself, I wasn't sure whether to scoff or to scream. If that really were the case, which I doubt that it is, and the boy really was depressed at five years old, then I think what we should all be concerned about is the loss of childhood, and of innocence. Clearly, we don't have to worry too much about imagination, there seemed to be plenty going round.
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39 of 44 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
There isn't a single swear word and no nudity or violence in this film and yet this is possibly the most disturbing and horrific piece of cinema I've ever witnessed.

Encapsulates everything that is wrong with fundamentalist religion, in this case Christianity. You will never witness a more wrenching hypocrisy than the female 'teacher' of the camp telling the kids that the enemy knows that kids are vulnerable and impressionable and that's why they're teaching them these things now to 'protect' them. Or the image of the parent dragging a toddler's arm into the air in response to a question that presumably required an affirmative answer in the parent's warped mind.

This film is essential (if somewhat stomach-churning) viewing in order to understand a part of American society that is becoming increasingly influential in decisions regarding the US's (already overly enthuastic) warmongering making these people potentially far more of a threat to world peace than the likes of the Taliban or Al-Qaeda could ever hope to be.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
an eye opener
I think this arguably this is one of the most disturbing documentaries I've seen. Let me lay my cards on the table by stating that I am a research scientist in the field of public... Read more
Published 21 hours ago by P. I. Simunovich
Disturbing but important viewing
I saw this documentary some time ago in the cinema and at the time was surprised that so few people knew about it. I consider it a classic. Read more
Published 4 months ago by S. Marques
Depressing
The Americans in this documentary have a clear view of Jesus that less developed nations like the UK have not GOT yet. Read more
Published 7 months ago by I. A. McFarlane
Terribly biased - but showcasing an amazing ministry
One of the most popular activities nowadays is bashing Christians, especially those that dare to believe the Bible is true , and predictably this is the angle taken by practically... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Mike
Scary, a bit overstretched though i imagine
Attempting to expose a vast underbelly of American evangelists this journey from Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady uncovers ... evangelists. Read more
Published 17 months ago by D. J. Andrews
This wasn't as gripping as I thought it would be
I viewed this for research into an art project at Uni. Having spent a week reviewing material about the Phelps family, this was small change in comparison. Read more
Published on 22 July 2009 by M. Scarlett
lambs to the slaughter
The abuse of a child's mind is as bad as the abuse of his body. If this is religion it must be stamped out. Read more
Published on 25 Sep 2008 by Maurice Hill
Indoctrinating the kids
As the closing credits roll we hear Norman Greenbaum's "Spirit in the Sky." The lyric goes something like, "I got a friend in Jesus... Read more
Published on 27 Nov 2007 by Dennis Littrell
Sad, scary, but brilliant
What makes Jesus Camp such a great documentary, is the fact that there is no specific for or against stance from the makers. Read more
Published on 25 July 2007 by Lars-Christian
Pity the children
Jesus Camp is a riveting but bleak film.

Most eight year olds are not aware of, nor concerned with, government, politics, ideology or theology. Read more
Published on 7 July 2007 by Daiho
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