The Rapture (1991)


The Rapture is one of the most courageous films I have seen in a long time, one of the most daring. It's themes of religion are scary to anyone seeing it, on whichever side you are on.

Mimi Rogers in the lead role is fantastic. She goes from a sinner to a believer to a sinner back again. Since I had never heard of this film before I saw it, I did not know what to expect. It started off very bleak, with amazing dialogue, and as the film goes by it's tone changes. The film also forces us to hear it out, to witness the distressing things that this woman does, yet she is not a villain in any way. The scary thing is that there are actually people like this out there in the world. Here we go back to the focus of the film, God. Obviously a film like this will never get unanimous approval because of the religious subject matter, and because people always have different opinions. Some will agree with the lead character, some might see where she is coming from, others will completely despise her, and in terms despise the film. However, one thing is certain, the film is coming from a group of very talented people. Technically, the film is brilliant, the cinematography very focused and 'normal' at the right time and in the end it shows us another side of the film.

I do not really understand the ending, but this is a film that goes where rarely any films go, and should be seen by anyone. I am surprised I had never heard of it, and while many will disagree because of the actual focus of the film, I think it is really something great.
9/10





http://www.imdb.com/board/bd0000005/thread/124607950

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The sad thing is, in truth, Sharon was never "saved." There is no evidence that she ever understood the meaning of the pearl; her daughter woke her when the 'pearl" appeared and yet Sharon went back to sleep. Sharon heard the words and wanted desperately to believe, but she couldn't--in reality, she had no faith.

What Sharon had was her interpretation of the scriptures. She took her own will, human will, and performed her actions based on what *she* wanted to do. Never once did God send her any message that she had to follow. Sharon made her own decisions based on what she believed God should do for her, based on her own time table. She did not accept the free will that God gives us; rather, she chose to give up what she "believed" because she felt that God had failed her and then blamed God for what she had done, as if He'd forced her hand somehow. If anything, this story is a depressing cautionary tale about how human beings refuse to take personal responsibility and how they will give up their most precious possession--their soul--to blame someone else for what they've done.

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