"Should we take our kids to see 'The Star' film?"
I recently received a letter from a woman whose church's children's ministry was wondering if the new Christmas film, "The Star," is worth seeing.
There are no reviews yet, but there is a considerable amount of promotion. What most see when Googling this movie is a Shrek-like retelling of "the Christmas story" through the eyes of the animals. But it is only loosely based on the real biblical account of Christ's birth, with a whole lot of made-up fantasy backstory.
From the trailer and press release, I caught a couple of details that you might want to consider. First, the soundtrack by Mariah Carey plays in the background with the lyrics, "that's what Christmas means to me," which is subtly pushing the idea of relativism - instead of truth, it's whatever truth is true in your own heart.
Another consideration is the idea that the animals who follow the star are actually not following a promise of the Messiah, but instead are looking for adventure and following their purpose through their own brave leaders. The press release could not make this more clear, as Bo, a donkey who “yearns for a life beyond his daily grind at the village mill," breaks free and goes on a wild adventure where he teams with other animals to “follow the Star and become unlikely heroes in the greatest story ever told — the first Christmas.”
Did you catch that? The hero of the Christmas story isn't Christ, it's Bo the donkey and his friends.
Executive producer DeVon Franklin says the film offers many lessons for our own lives when it comes to the donkey's feeling that he needs to fulfill that undiscovered purpose.“We all have a destiny, a calling or a purpose … often we don’t realize how it is all working towards it,” Franklin said. “That’s what’s kind of great about Bo’s journey.” Source
The Advent of Christ's first coming is an integral part of the Gospel. But many parents who are desperate for a family-friendly film might not realize the implications of embedding a different Gospel into their children's' impressionable noggins than what God's Word tells us. Are the producers using Christ to entertain us, or are they truly telling us why He came?
The problem with these types of stories is that children do not have discernment to know truth from fantasy. Images from movies stay with children for a long time, whether true or not. My two cents: "The Star" is an Oprahfield fantasy version of the Gospel. Does it matter? You bet it does. Will parents care that they're giving their kids a different gospel?
The Hollywood star-power behind The Star is just impressive enough to hook the unwise into thinking they're doing their kids a favor by exposing them to the hilarity of Mary and Joseph as joke-wielding cartoons.
The mixed bag of voice actors come from a variety of backgrounds: The cast features Steven Yeun of "Walking Dead" fame as Bo the donkey, Gina Rodriguez (Mary), Zachary Levi (Joseph), Keegan-Michael Key (Dave the dove), Kelly Clarkson (Leah the horse), Anthony Anderson (Zach the goat), Aidy Bryant (Ruth the sheep), Ving Rhames (Thaddeus the dog), Gabriel Iglesias (Rufus the dog), Patricia Heaton (Edith the cow), Kristin Chenoweth (Abby the mouse), national radio personality Delilah Rene (Elizabeth), Christopher Plummer (King Herod), Kris Kristofferson (Old Donkey), and Tracy Morgan (Felix), Tyler Perry (Cyrus), Oprah Winfrey (Deborah) as the three camels.
The movie opens in theaters nationwide Nov. 17. Here is the trailer:
This article was originally at Naomi's Table Bible Studies, a Scripture-based site for women. Ladies, follow us here.