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Salvation Boulevard

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Salvation Boulevard
Theatrical release poster
Directed byGeorge Ratliff
Written byDouglas Stone
George Ratliff
Larry Beinhart
Based onSalvation Boulevard
by Larry Beinhart
Produced byMark Victor
Peter Fruchtman
Celine Rattray
Cathy Schulman
Gordon Bijelonic
StarringPierce Brosnan
Jennifer Connelly
Ed Harris
Greg Kinnear
Marisa Tomei
Jim Gaffigan
CinematographyTim Orr
Edited byMichael LaHaie
Music byGeorge S. Clinton
Distributed byIFC Films
Release dates
  • January 24, 2011 (2011-01-24) (Sundance)
  • July 15, 2011 (2011-07-15) (United States)
Running time
96 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$5.5 million[1]
Box office$89,182[1]

Salvation Boulevard is a 2011 comedy thriller film with religious satire undertones directed by George Ratliff, and starring Pierce Brosnan, Jennifer Connelly, Ed Harris, Greg Kinnear, Marisa Tomei and Jim Gaffigan. It is based on the novel of the same name by Larry Beinhart.

Plot

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Carl Vandermeer is a former Deadhead turned evangelical. He, his wife Gwen and his stepdaughter Angie attend a megachurch, the Church of the Third Millennium, run by the charismatic Pastor Dan Day, who is planning to expand his church into a large Christian community, "City on a Hill". At the start of the film, the Vandermeers attend a debate between Pastor Dan and Professor Paul Blaylock, an outspoken atheist. At the end of the debate, Pastor Dan is invited to Blaylock's college for a nightcap. He brings along Carl. At Blaylock's office, he reveals that he invited Pastor Dan over to propose that the two of them, both bestselling authors, collaborate on a book about their opposing worldviews and views on religion. During a discussion about morality without religion, Pastor Dan picks up an antique pistol and pulls the trigger on Blaylock, unaware that the gun is loaded and functional. The bullet hits Blaylock in the skull, apparently killing him. In a state of shock, Pastor Dan places the gun in Blaylock's hand to make it look like a suicide. He and Carl then drive home in silence, neither of them telling anyone what happened.

After getting a call from a stranger claiming to be his "friend", Pastor Dan approaches Carl's neighbor, videographer Jerry Hobson, and appears to confess to what happened. At the sermon the next day, Pastor Dan informs the congregation that Blaylock survived his "suicide", the bullet was removed and he is in a coma. After the sermon, Jerry takes Carl aside and gets into his car. During the drive, Jerry turns out to have been told by Pastor Dan that Carl was the one who pulled the trigger and tried to cover it up. Jerry drives Carl to a quarry and tries to execute him. He is distracted when Angie, who was asleep in the backseat of the car, interrupts the act, allowing Carl to knock Jerry out with a rock. Carl then meets with Gwen and her father, Jim Hunt, and tells them what happened with Pastor Dan and Jerry, but neither believes him, thinking it was a dream or an "acid flashback". Realizing they will tell Pastor Dan, Carl goes to Blaylock's college, where he runs into Honey Foster, a friend from his Deadhead days who became campus security and met him at the debate. He asks her to turn in the footage from a security camera that would have seen him and Pastor Day enter, but finds that the footage has been altered to erase them - apparently by Jerry, who worked at the campus as a video technician.

Meeting with Gwen and Jim, Pastor Day convinces them that Carl may be unstable and will react violently if he is caught by the police. Meanwhile, since most of the police are loyal to Pastor Dan, Honey lets Carl hide at her house until things blow over. While they are out driving, Carl's car is stopped by a group of armed men who kidnap him. He wakes up in the house of Jorge Guzman de Vaca, a Mexican crime lord who claims he is in Mexico. Guzman shows that he has a secret recording of Pastor Dan shooting Professor Blaylock. He makes Carl write down and sign two confessions. One tells the truth of what happened, but in the other Carl backs up Pastor Dan's story. Guzman, who has a large business in construction, plans to use the recording to blackmail Pastor Dan into giving him the contract to build City on a Hill, promising to keep Carl in the house until the project is done.

The next morning, when Guzman, revealed to be Pastor Day's mysterious "friend", leaves to make the deal, Carl escapes the house, which turns out to be in the same state as the church, with a DVD containing the footage hidden in a bible. He calls Gwen, asking her not to tell Pastor Dan and to call the police, and later sees a news report revealing that Professor Blaylock has woken up and can tell the truth. Carl is picked up by a detective, who turns out to be in league with Pastor Dan and Jerry, whom Gwen called instead. Jerry and the detective take a handcuffed Carl to an abandoned warehouse to burn him with gasoline, but discover that none of them have any matches or a lighter. When they try to light the gasoline with a stun gun, they bungle it and get set on fire themselves, allowing Carl to escape. Meanwhile, Pastor Dan meets with Guzman at the construction site of City on a Hill. Guzman tries to play the DVD of the shooting, but instead plays a sex tape he made with his wife. Offended, Pastor Dan starts hitting him, but is stopped when Guzman stabs him in the abdomen and leaves him in the trunk of a car. After a while, Carl arrives by foot and finds the bleeding Pastor Dan, who is hallucinating because of the blood loss and thinks he is at the Pearly Gates, and calls for help on a cell phone. Thinking Carl is an angel, Pastor Dan asks him if he is going to heaven. Out of sympathy, Carl tells him he is. As Carl waits for help to arrive, a bolt of lightning strikes the ground behind him, severing his handcuffs.

The credits reveal that Pastor Day survived, spent two years in jail, where he founded a new ministry inspired by his near-death experience, and became a real-estate broker in Arizona. Gwen divorced Carl citing irreconcilable differences, though Carl still has a good relationship with Angie. Jim started his own private investigation firm and went back to his old Episcopal church. Professor Blaylock continued his teachings against religion. Carl, on the other hand, left the church, began a relationship with Honey and became an "ex-ex-Deadhead."

Cast

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Production

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Filming took place in Michigan, particularly Ann Arbor and Dearborn, in April and June 2010.[2][3]

Release

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Salvation Boulevard premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2011, where it was acquired by IFC Films.[4] It was given a limited release on July 15, 2011, in the United States.[5] It was released on DVD on September 18, 2012.[6]

Reception

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A.O. Scott of The New York Times wrote "there is the inkling of a strong, interesting idea here, about how some versions of modern religion are predicated on the systematic denial of reality, but Salvation Boulevard is itself too loosely tethered to the actual world to make the point with the necessary vigor or acuity".[7] On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 23% based on 35 reviews, with an average rating of 4.29/10.[8]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Salvation Boulevard". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  2. ^ "Catching up with local "Salvation Boulevard" filming". AnnArbor.com. May 17, 2010. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  3. ^ "'Salvation Boulevard,' filmed partly in Ann Arbor and Plymouth, releases trailer online". AnnArbor.com. May 26, 2011. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  4. ^ Chitwood, Adam (January 28, 2011). "Sundance 2011: Salvation Boulevard, Project Nim and The Last Mountain Find Distributors". Collider. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  5. ^ Smith, Nigel M. (July 13, 2011). "IN HIS OWN WORDS | George Ratliff Shares an Explosively Funny Scene from "Salvation Boulevard"". IndieWire. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  6. ^ Gallagher, Brian (July 9, 2012). "Salvation Boulevard DVD Debuts September 18th [Exclusive]". MovieWeb. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  7. ^ Scott, A.O. (July 14, 2011). "An Evangelist, an Atheist and an Act That Tests Faith". The New York Times – via www.nytimes.com.
  8. ^ "Salvation Boulevard (2011)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
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