The Case for Christ

The Case for Christ

One man's journey to solve the biggest mystery of all times

  • 112 Mins
  • 2017
  • en
  • star6.9/ 10

Based on the true story of an award-winning investigative journalist -- and avowed atheist -- who applies his well-honed journalistic and legal skills to disprove the newfound Christian faith of his wife... with unexpected, life-altering results.

Review

tmdb28039023

The protagonist of this movie briefly mentions the Jonestown massacre, which is ironic considering he's the one who ends up drinking the proverbial Kool-Aid. The Case for Christ follows the hero as he transitions from a quote-unquote investigative reporter to a Christian pastor — not a big loss to the former profession, since Lee Strobel (Mike Vogel) appears to have graduated from the Geraldo school of journalism, pornstache included. Accordingly, the results of his investigation are as disappointing as the contents of Al Capone's vault. For reasons not worth recounting, Lee’s wife Leslie (Erika Christensen) decides to accept Christ into her heart; the atheist Lee reacts to the news as if she’d just confessed having a lover (indeed, at one point he even accuses her of “cheating on him with Jesus”). Following his mentor's advice, Lee sets out to prove that the Resurrection never happened and thereby discredit Christianity. The rest of the film is an illustration that for those who believe in God, no explanation is necessary, and for those who do not believe, no explanation is possible. I would add that for those watching The Case for Christ, no explanation is provided. In essence, the titular case for Christ is made up of a mixture of ipse dixit, proof by assertion, ad hoc hypothesis, and cherry picking. At no time does Strobel question any of this, and the reason is simple: if he did, the entire house of cards would fall faster than Kabul to the Taliban. “When is enough evidence enough evidence?” someone asks Strobel; the answer, which the film conveniently evades, is: when it comes to anecdotal evidence, never. Worst of all, the real-life Strobel's beliefs are as inconsistent and questionable as his journalism; he is so secretly ashamed of his conversion that, in addition to this film and the book on which it is based, there is a documentary, all with the sole purpose of publicly justifying his decision, which after all is absolutely nobody's business but his own. It’s safe to conclude that just as Strobel blatantly lies to his audience, so does he lies to himself (unless his so-called faith is nothing more than a scam to relieve fools of their money, which seems more likely than anything else).

Image 0
Image 1
Image 2
Image 3
Image 4
Image 5

Movies You May Like

Fight Club
The Poseidon Adventure
Apollo 13
Das Experiment
To Die For
Dances with Wolves
The Hours
Солярис
To Kill a Mockingbird
The Grapes of Wrath
Titanic
Cidade de Deus
Full Metal Jacket
Der Untergang
The Passion of the Christ
Wild Things
The Killing Fields
Trainspotting
Interview with the Vampire
Soldaat van Oranje

Recommended Movies

Spark: A Space Tail
Ragamuffin
Krew Boga
Zerwany kłos
The Conversation
Elstree 1976
Practice
In syriated
Preboj
Beckman
Andre the Giant
Facing the Giants
Same Kind of Different as Me
God's Not Dead
Swingers
Minimalism: A Documentary About the Important Things
Extraterrestrial
God's Not Dead 2
Overcomer
La Chèvre