Was it the money? Did he owe someone a favour? Cage why are you in this terrible movie ? Left Behind is even worse than the Kirk Cameron version ,which also sucked. The book I am sure is better, since many have read it. This movie is a career killer ...it is sad to see Cage left behind by Hollywood. The acting is bad , Cage tries hard to make work out of a script that was seemingly penned by 8 year old's . I mean the dialogue is terrible. Why waste your money making a film that is just bad. Cage needs to really rethink his career . Honestly I felt ashamed for Nick . Wild at Heart , Leaving Las Vegas, and Oscar winner... My God man have you no self respect? Nick you are better than this.
689 Reviews
Basic and Boring...
crimson_knight_723 October 2014
Once again I was deceived by the trailers as they made this movie look absolutely amazing; however, the trailers were the only good things that came out of this movie, and that says a lot.
First of all, we have the common Christian movie stereotype where some of a family is for God, and some of it is against God. Than we are provided with the frequent misunderstandings non-Christians face regarding the meaning of scripture due to Christians who have almost 0 theological education. So because the Christians fail to provide an adequate answer, the non-Christian lashes out. At least provide the audience with some level of complexity if you're going to have some kind of a theological debate. Your audience understands more than you think. Now if we could simply ignore the horrendous script not to mention the awful acting, we still have a movie full of stereotypes regarding non-Christians, Christians, Muslisms and even smaller people (just trying to be politically correct) which got old very fast.
But believe it or not, this is not even the worst part of the movie! The worst part is the terrible background music! To put it bluntly, it was GARBAGE!! It was so floaty and totally ruined the atmosphere. Now don't get me wrong, some movies require floaty music, but it would have made more sense to have music that was thematically apocalyptic. For example, Armageddon, Independence Day, or World War Z each had excellent pieces which blend perfectly into the atmosphere of the movie. The fact is even if the script to a movie is mediocre, having an excellent soundtrack can drastically improve the atmosphere. With a corny 80's saxaphone piece playing in the background, or cheesy orchestral music, which sounded digital, my wife and I walked out of the movie going "what did we just see?"
Though I am a pastor, I was hoping to be raptured during the movie. Do what I should have done and save your money by not seeing this film.
First of all, we have the common Christian movie stereotype where some of a family is for God, and some of it is against God. Than we are provided with the frequent misunderstandings non-Christians face regarding the meaning of scripture due to Christians who have almost 0 theological education. So because the Christians fail to provide an adequate answer, the non-Christian lashes out. At least provide the audience with some level of complexity if you're going to have some kind of a theological debate. Your audience understands more than you think. Now if we could simply ignore the horrendous script not to mention the awful acting, we still have a movie full of stereotypes regarding non-Christians, Christians, Muslisms and even smaller people (just trying to be politically correct) which got old very fast.
But believe it or not, this is not even the worst part of the movie! The worst part is the terrible background music! To put it bluntly, it was GARBAGE!! It was so floaty and totally ruined the atmosphere. Now don't get me wrong, some movies require floaty music, but it would have made more sense to have music that was thematically apocalyptic. For example, Armageddon, Independence Day, or World War Z each had excellent pieces which blend perfectly into the atmosphere of the movie. The fact is even if the script to a movie is mediocre, having an excellent soundtrack can drastically improve the atmosphere. With a corny 80's saxaphone piece playing in the background, or cheesy orchestral music, which sounded digital, my wife and I walked out of the movie going "what did we just see?"
Though I am a pastor, I was hoping to be raptured during the movie. Do what I should have done and save your money by not seeing this film.
It reelly is that bad
the_real_smile12 December 2020
I only wanted to see this movie because I love the series "The Leftovers", this movie has the same theme and from the beginning it is clear it's a rippoff. It is clear that the amount of money Cage is in dept in, is so large, he literally takes on every B or C movie they make, he is even worse then Seagal. The acting, the story, the directing, it is pretty bad, I guess all the money went to Cage. For a really good disappearance story, you really have to watch The Leftovers.
When some other people walked out, we 'left behind' them.
media-dtv13 October 2014
This movie epitomizes the problem with religion in general.
It starts with a conclusion, so it's tediously predictable & boring boring boring, strictly by-the-numbers fluff for the easily entertained.
As demonstrated the featured review, the only people who will like this dog are those who take a creepy satisfaction in their belief that they alone will get sucked up to heaven while everybody else fries in hell.
As a result, it's aimed at a narrow audience of knee-jerk true believers who would like it no matter how awful it is.
And this was awful, folks. The script falls so flat I even lost my taste for popcorn. Even my daughter, who wanted to see it, got bored pretty quickly.
So when some other people walked out, we 'left behind' them.
It starts with a conclusion, so it's tediously predictable & boring boring boring, strictly by-the-numbers fluff for the easily entertained.
As demonstrated the featured review, the only people who will like this dog are those who take a creepy satisfaction in their belief that they alone will get sucked up to heaven while everybody else fries in hell.
As a result, it's aimed at a narrow audience of knee-jerk true believers who would like it no matter how awful it is.
And this was awful, folks. The script falls so flat I even lost my taste for popcorn. Even my daughter, who wanted to see it, got bored pretty quickly.
So when some other people walked out, we 'left behind' them.
This one shouldn't be on the list.
planktonrules21 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I saw "Left Behind" because I have a strange hobby...to watch as many of the films as I can from IMDB's infamous Bottom 100 list. This list consists of the 100 lowest rated mainstream releases. So, obviously this is for horrible films, and I assumed the movie was horrible. The problem is...it's not a bad movie at all! So why is it on the list? I have three theories. First, it's become very fashionable lately to hate Nicholas Cage. Two of his films (this one and the remake of "Wicker Man") are on this list...yet neither is a bad film....but folk love to talk about how rotten an actor he is. He was just fine in "Left Behind". Second, the film has a super-narrow appeal...to Evangelical Christians...in particular folks like Baptists, Church of God and other such denominations. Why? Because these churches tend to preach about the end times and the Rapture. Other denominations, such as Methodists, Lutherans and Catholics do not generally hold this doctrine. So, if folks who aren't brought up hearing about the Rapture see the film, they are probably more likely to dislike the plot. Finally, my other thought is perhaps some group of folks have flooded IMDB with scores of 1 (such as how 4chan has attacked a few films en masse). All I know is technically speaking, it's a decent production...not nearly earning the abysmal score of 3.1 it currently has.
The story centers on a particular family. The father (Cage) and daughter are not thrilled that the mother (Lea Thompson) has become a Bible-thumping Christian. However, they are shocked when Mom, other believing Christians and all the children instantly vanish....sending the world into total chaos. It's really bad for Cage, as he's piloting an airliner over the Atlantic when all this occurs.
Generally, the film kept me interested and was decent. A few things I didn't like were the ending where the plane made an emergency landing....you just have to see it to believe, I mean NOT believe it. Second, I thought the tiny man was a bit overplayed. Who is THAT hostile?? But apart from all that, a decent film....with decent production values and acting.
The story centers on a particular family. The father (Cage) and daughter are not thrilled that the mother (Lea Thompson) has become a Bible-thumping Christian. However, they are shocked when Mom, other believing Christians and all the children instantly vanish....sending the world into total chaos. It's really bad for Cage, as he's piloting an airliner over the Atlantic when all this occurs.
Generally, the film kept me interested and was decent. A few things I didn't like were the ending where the plane made an emergency landing....you just have to see it to believe, I mean NOT believe it. Second, I thought the tiny man was a bit overplayed. Who is THAT hostile?? But apart from all that, a decent film....with decent production values and acting.
Not as bad as the reviewers say!
Bonz9920 January 2022
I came across the "Left Behind" novel in a Target store and stood by the bookcases speed-reading it for about an hour. (I.e., I never actually bought the book, which is probably why I was not taken in the rapture.)
Although I am utterly non-religious, the story was mildly gripping, as is this film. Cage did a creditable job, as did most of the cast. If you're looking for a reasonably good disaster movie (where God provides the disaster), this is not a bad time-waster.
The movie was almost universally panned by critics, but I'd bet the overwhelming majority of them are not only non-religious, but actively anti-religion. If this movie had been made in the 1950s or 60s, I suspect it would have done quite a bit better at the box office, along with the Charlton Heston and Victor Mature biblical epics.
Although I am utterly non-religious, the story was mildly gripping, as is this film. Cage did a creditable job, as did most of the cast. If you're looking for a reasonably good disaster movie (where God provides the disaster), this is not a bad time-waster.
The movie was almost universally panned by critics, but I'd bet the overwhelming majority of them are not only non-religious, but actively anti-religion. If this movie had been made in the 1950s or 60s, I suspect it would have done quite a bit better at the box office, along with the Charlton Heston and Victor Mature biblical epics.
I want my money back
louisafontelera13 October 2014
This movie was simply AWFUL. Really, really bad. And to those who are going to argue that the reason why this movie is rated so low is because people are becoming "anti- Christian", NO. The acting was terrible, the script was horrendous, seriously. A group of high school kids in drama club could do better. It was deathly boring, i thought I was in there for more than three hours.
Worst of all is the message its trying to send. Isn't it curious that the movie tried so hard to portray all of those that were left as bad messed up people? So is that supposed to mean that those who don't believe in the Christian God are all either cheaters, flirts, gamblers, thieves, drug addicts and just generally messed up? Because that's what I saw. Don't think I wouldn't catch that. I get that its a Christian movie but its still a pretty offensive way of showing off your faith.
Even in the Philippines, which is predominantly made up of believers, people in the theatre couldn't help but laugh at how absolutely ridiculous everything was. Worst movie EVER
Worst of all is the message its trying to send. Isn't it curious that the movie tried so hard to portray all of those that were left as bad messed up people? So is that supposed to mean that those who don't believe in the Christian God are all either cheaters, flirts, gamblers, thieves, drug addicts and just generally messed up? Because that's what I saw. Don't think I wouldn't catch that. I get that its a Christian movie but its still a pretty offensive way of showing off your faith.
Even in the Philippines, which is predominantly made up of believers, people in the theatre couldn't help but laugh at how absolutely ridiculous everything was. Worst movie EVER
Evangelical Intention Lost in Cheesy Confusion
3xHCCH13 October 2014
"Left Behind" is about the Steele family. Mother Irene becomes very deeply religious and active in church in recent years. Unfortunately, this caused spirited daughter Chloe, as well as her pilot husband Ray, to drift apart from her. When Chloe comes home to surprise her father for his birthday, he was called to fly a plane from New York to London, among his other ulterior motives. That same day, a distressing event occurs where millions of people simultaneously suddenly disappear, leaving their clothes and things behind. Those people left behind scramble to make sense of what happens, as Ray struggles to land his damaged plane safely back to New York.
Academy Award winner Nicholas Cage once again majorly disappoints with his hammy and florid performance in this film as Ray here. He had a moment in the end where some genuine emotion came through, but it felt too late and too brief. It was good to see '80s sweetheart Lea Thompson back on the big screen again as Irene, but she was barely there. Cassi Thompson did her best to carry the film on the ground as Chloe, but her efforts were negated by the lines she was made to say and the stunts she was made to do.
When the passengers were boarding the plane, I felt like I was watching a cheesy episode of the "Love Boat". Of course, there was going to be a sexy and flirtatious stewardess Hattie (Nicki Whelan). There was a hotshot TV journalist Buck Williams (so this is what Chad Michael Murray is up to nowadays), a Moslem guy, an angry midget guy, a sleazy businessman, a nerdy Asian (!) conspiracy theorist, a nervous drug addict lady, an even more nervous gun-toting mother (Why did you accept this role, Jordin Sparks?). I guess you can see the chaotic over-the-top acting circus.
In fact, this whole film had an 70s-80s TV movie look and feel about it. Even the opening credits looked from that era. If "The Remaining" had a horror approach to depicting the Rapture, "Left Behind" played like a bad B-action film, down to its fiery, explosive, down-the-wire, narrow- escape type finale.
The Christian agenda was obvious from the start, and I did not mind that. In fact, I was looking forward to seeing how they would tie it into the story. However, even as a Christian film, I felt this film did not do its job well at all. Oddly, it made Christians appear unnaturally nutty or weird. Worst of all, its evangelical message was lost in the confusion and the cheese. 2/10.
Academy Award winner Nicholas Cage once again majorly disappoints with his hammy and florid performance in this film as Ray here. He had a moment in the end where some genuine emotion came through, but it felt too late and too brief. It was good to see '80s sweetheart Lea Thompson back on the big screen again as Irene, but she was barely there. Cassi Thompson did her best to carry the film on the ground as Chloe, but her efforts were negated by the lines she was made to say and the stunts she was made to do.
When the passengers were boarding the plane, I felt like I was watching a cheesy episode of the "Love Boat". Of course, there was going to be a sexy and flirtatious stewardess Hattie (Nicki Whelan). There was a hotshot TV journalist Buck Williams (so this is what Chad Michael Murray is up to nowadays), a Moslem guy, an angry midget guy, a sleazy businessman, a nerdy Asian (!) conspiracy theorist, a nervous drug addict lady, an even more nervous gun-toting mother (Why did you accept this role, Jordin Sparks?). I guess you can see the chaotic over-the-top acting circus.
In fact, this whole film had an 70s-80s TV movie look and feel about it. Even the opening credits looked from that era. If "The Remaining" had a horror approach to depicting the Rapture, "Left Behind" played like a bad B-action film, down to its fiery, explosive, down-the-wire, narrow- escape type finale.
The Christian agenda was obvious from the start, and I did not mind that. In fact, I was looking forward to seeing how they would tie it into the story. However, even as a Christian film, I felt this film did not do its job well at all. Oddly, it made Christians appear unnaturally nutty or weird. Worst of all, its evangelical message was lost in the confusion and the cheese. 2/10.
Soul Sucking
kunalpuri-in23 October 2014
This film is so banal it takes the banality out of The Banal. The premise is absurd. The unravelling of the plot is absurd. The performances are, at best, distracted as is the direction. Even the actors seem unconvinced. I'm still kicking myself for watching this film. Sin and purity are depicted with juvenile simplicity. Religious bias is arrogantly displayed (but I'll leave that to the unfortunate viewer to spot). Complex ideas like forgiveness, atonement and judgement are reduced to idiocy at an atomic level. I apologise if this sounds too much like a rant but for someone who watches well over 15 films a week, I have never subjected myself to anything this offensive (to the senses) in over 25 years.
Not good but not awful
mystee_reyne14 May 2023
The film is pretty straight forward. Not well written. And much of the acting is pretty bad. The better actors are the top billed: Nick Cage and the guy from One Tree Hill. Many of the actors on the plane were terrible. The blonde flight attendant wasn't bad although she seems to be kinda unknown. Jordan Sparks should stick to singing.
With all that being said, this is a niche film for a certain audience (Christians). I'm not sure why atheists and agnostics would watch it and then be totally annoyed or angered by it because of its Christian themes. The film is about the Christian Rapture. And I'm sure most people knew that before watching.
The problem with 90% of the reviews here are that they are biased. Their reviews aren't based on how bad the film is, but instead on their disagreement with the religious ideology behind the film, and their rejection of Christianity. In other words, they're reviewing Christianity instead of the film. But in terms of quality, this film is on par with Sharknado. And this does not deserve the title of Nick Cage's worst film. That prestigious distinction still goes to The Wicker Man.
With all that being said, this is a niche film for a certain audience (Christians). I'm not sure why atheists and agnostics would watch it and then be totally annoyed or angered by it because of its Christian themes. The film is about the Christian Rapture. And I'm sure most people knew that before watching.
The problem with 90% of the reviews here are that they are biased. Their reviews aren't based on how bad the film is, but instead on their disagreement with the religious ideology behind the film, and their rejection of Christianity. In other words, they're reviewing Christianity instead of the film. But in terms of quality, this film is on par with Sharknado. And this does not deserve the title of Nick Cage's worst film. That prestigious distinction still goes to The Wicker Man.
Snakes on a plane - Jesus edition
samuel-a-spiers23 October 2014
This was the worst movie I have ever seen. It is clearly destined to go straight to day time television. From the start the movies direction, plot, acting and music all give the impression of a day time drama but much much worse.
I don't hate the premise of the movie, it's just like any other sci-fi fiction. However, this movie with it's bad acting and direction make it a complete and utter flop. Too much emphasis is placed on the religious aspects of this story making it feel like a veritable propaganda flick, ruining all chances of immersing in the story-line.
Do not waste your money on such a poorly produced movie. Religious or not, you will walk out of the theatre with nothing but regrets.
I don't hate the premise of the movie, it's just like any other sci-fi fiction. However, this movie with it's bad acting and direction make it a complete and utter flop. Too much emphasis is placed on the religious aspects of this story making it feel like a veritable propaganda flick, ruining all chances of immersing in the story-line.
Do not waste your money on such a poorly produced movie. Religious or not, you will walk out of the theatre with nothing but regrets.
Completely empty and soulless
Screen_Blitz13 April 2016
Nicolas Cage made himself a household name in the 90s and early 2000s with various action roles and dramatic roles. This actor has started in some memorable roles that have drove him into the cinematic spotlight, but lately his filmography seems to have taken a downward slope, with a number of ill-fated roles. This apocalyptic thriller based on a best selling faith- based novel series by Jerry B. Jenkins is only another role to pull Cage deeper into his career trajectory. Directed by Vic Armstrong, this Christian thriller stars Nicolas Cage as Rayford Steele, an airplane pilot who is unexpectedly called into work on the day his daughter Chloe (played by Cassi Thomson) arrives home from college for his birthday, much to their disappointment. Chloe comes home to visit her religious mother (played by Lea Thompson) and little brother. After brushing off another one of her mother's religious testimonies, Chloe takes her little brother to the mall for a little brother-sister time. Suddenly within a blink of an eye, millions of people (including Chloe's brother) around the globe vanish leaving their clothes behind in an event known as The Rapture as described in the Bible. With the world plunged into darkness and chaos and Rayford's plane on low fuel, he, Chloe, and the remaining survivors fight to survive in the fateful event unknown to them.
Christian dramas are often subject to poor reviews by critics, mainly for their lazy production value and acting, and having seemingly nothing on their agenda than to shove their religious messages down your throat. I personally don't have much of a problem with Christian dramas since I'm a believer myself, along as they are good. This one is the very opposite of good. And this all starts with the horrendous acting by just about everyone in the cast, especially Nicolas Cage who serves as the main star. None of them are remotely convincing in their roles, particularly in the scene when Cassi Thomson watches everyone around disappear within a flash (literally) and her reaction is awfully calm for someone who just witness a significantly mysterious event. The worse matters from the writing which often comes to be laughable and redundant. After the first twenty minutes, viewers spend over an hour with the characters trying to figure out the vaguely explained event that those (mostly Christians) already know happens, and the scenes never land. The only possible redeemable scene may come from Cassi Thomson's character speaking to a lonesome man at a Church who discusses about asking God for forgiveness of our sins, something mentioned in the bible multiple times. The rest of the film ponders through non-stop choppiness and even worse, it spends almost no effort on delivering its holy message. Instead, it focuses on the survival of these airplane passengers which quickly grows tiresome before the first hour.
Left Behind is thoroughly incompetent thriller with poor writing, poor acting, and an overall thin direction by Vic Armstrong. This film is completely soulless and empty in entertainment, even for those who are devote Christians, though those who enjoy religious themes may come to ignore the lazy production value. It is just sad to see an actor like Nicolas Cage in such a lifeless role, especially during this time in his career.
Christian dramas are often subject to poor reviews by critics, mainly for their lazy production value and acting, and having seemingly nothing on their agenda than to shove their religious messages down your throat. I personally don't have much of a problem with Christian dramas since I'm a believer myself, along as they are good. This one is the very opposite of good. And this all starts with the horrendous acting by just about everyone in the cast, especially Nicolas Cage who serves as the main star. None of them are remotely convincing in their roles, particularly in the scene when Cassi Thomson watches everyone around disappear within a flash (literally) and her reaction is awfully calm for someone who just witness a significantly mysterious event. The worse matters from the writing which often comes to be laughable and redundant. After the first twenty minutes, viewers spend over an hour with the characters trying to figure out the vaguely explained event that those (mostly Christians) already know happens, and the scenes never land. The only possible redeemable scene may come from Cassi Thomson's character speaking to a lonesome man at a Church who discusses about asking God for forgiveness of our sins, something mentioned in the bible multiple times. The rest of the film ponders through non-stop choppiness and even worse, it spends almost no effort on delivering its holy message. Instead, it focuses on the survival of these airplane passengers which quickly grows tiresome before the first hour.
Left Behind is thoroughly incompetent thriller with poor writing, poor acting, and an overall thin direction by Vic Armstrong. This film is completely soulless and empty in entertainment, even for those who are devote Christians, though those who enjoy religious themes may come to ignore the lazy production value. It is just sad to see an actor like Nicolas Cage in such a lifeless role, especially during this time in his career.
Can I select zero stars?
a_p_west25 May 2020
Horrible, it does not get any better
kizea2063926 October 2014
Do not sit through this.
You hope it becomes better, but it never does.
There is no actual plot or ending. If you are in it for Nicholas Cage or airplanes, it will assault all you know of them.
This is my first review, I had to get an account to verbalize how horrible this was, it just leaves you grasping at straws why you watched this and anything good there was in the movie is not enough when you reach the end.
I have no idea why we continued to watch, it was insulting and base when it came to the end. The beginning starts with the lead female getting to up in Christian grills. It was a bit unnecessary, but it serves as a HA! Told you so moment at the end when it turned out that this was a rapture film. Which is not bad, but there is just nothing to it. The lead females role is grating and irritating by most peoples standard, she did not have to be a Christian basher for this to be apparent.
H O R R I B L E
You hope it becomes better, but it never does.
There is no actual plot or ending. If you are in it for Nicholas Cage or airplanes, it will assault all you know of them.
This is my first review, I had to get an account to verbalize how horrible this was, it just leaves you grasping at straws why you watched this and anything good there was in the movie is not enough when you reach the end.
I have no idea why we continued to watch, it was insulting and base when it came to the end. The beginning starts with the lead female getting to up in Christian grills. It was a bit unnecessary, but it serves as a HA! Told you so moment at the end when it turned out that this was a rapture film. Which is not bad, but there is just nothing to it. The lead females role is grating and irritating by most peoples standard, she did not have to be a Christian basher for this to be apparent.
H O R R I B L E
THIS YEAR'S RAZZY
nogodnomasters2 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Chloe (Cassi Thomson) is a smart college student coming home to see her family. Unfortunately dad (Nicolas Cage) is a pilot who has to work and has a hot date with a stewardess (Nicky Whelan). Dad and daughter meet at the airport and discuss how they must be supportive of mom (Lea Thompson) who is more far gone than stage four cancer...she has Jesus!
Thirty minutes into the film and BAM! The rapture happens and it seems the people who really held this world together were not secular after all, but raptured Christians...except for cheating pilots, stews, EMTs, news casters, and midgets. Nice to know that after the rapture, the circus and Fox News will still be the same.
After the rapture we are all concerned...will the father unite with her daughter? How will they cope knowing their two missing family members are in heaven...and HEY! We just had the rapture! Who cares about two characters we never got to like in the first place? Boring.
The film lost its entertainment value after the rapture and maybe that is the real metaphor there.
2 stars at best. No swearing, sex, or nudity. No actors were raptured during the making of this film.
Thirty minutes into the film and BAM! The rapture happens and it seems the people who really held this world together were not secular after all, but raptured Christians...except for cheating pilots, stews, EMTs, news casters, and midgets. Nice to know that after the rapture, the circus and Fox News will still be the same.
After the rapture we are all concerned...will the father unite with her daughter? How will they cope knowing their two missing family members are in heaven...and HEY! We just had the rapture! Who cares about two characters we never got to like in the first place? Boring.
The film lost its entertainment value after the rapture and maybe that is the real metaphor there.
2 stars at best. No swearing, sex, or nudity. No actors were raptured during the making of this film.
Bad Acting, Direction, Script...Horrible by any Standard
danew1329 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
It's a bright sunny afternoon in New York and pitch dark an hour later for a plane heading from NY to London...this absurdity is one many throughout this train wreck of a film whose director I'm sure will not experience the Rapture.
Nick Cage must really need the money to work in this badly written and directed mess.
Left Behind deals with the Rapture, when the righteous on earth will be wafted into heaven...and by this film in the flesh but without any clothes. Well why not...if it was good enough for JC why not ordinary people, too.
Unlike other biblical films there are no earthquakes or volcanic eruptions, just people suddenly vanishing and the ensuing mass panic accompanied by inane dialog along with low budget situations such as having only two flight attendants and about a total of 50 passengers on a transatlantic flight.
Nick Cage must really need the money to work in this badly written and directed mess.
Left Behind deals with the Rapture, when the righteous on earth will be wafted into heaven...and by this film in the flesh but without any clothes. Well why not...if it was good enough for JC why not ordinary people, too.
Unlike other biblical films there are no earthquakes or volcanic eruptions, just people suddenly vanishing and the ensuing mass panic accompanied by inane dialog along with low budget situations such as having only two flight attendants and about a total of 50 passengers on a transatlantic flight.
Not as bad as the critics and ratings said
shinsrevenge5 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"Left behind" is a movie about people who disappear and about those who stay behind. In the middle of it all are a pilot (Nicolas Cage), his daughter and a plane full of less or more annoying or even ridiculous characters.
The acting and dialogues leave something to be desired. The story is about average. It has some tense moments. It's just that the producers of the movie tried too hard. They put every single stereotype in the plane. They had an interesting topic but mostly wasted its potential.
Let's put it this way: If it ran on TV and I had nothing better to watch, I'd probably watch it and say "It's okay. Not the worst way to spend the time".
The acting and dialogues leave something to be desired. The story is about average. It has some tense moments. It's just that the producers of the movie tried too hard. They put every single stereotype in the plane. They had an interesting topic but mostly wasted its potential.
Let's put it this way: If it ran on TV and I had nothing better to watch, I'd probably watch it and say "It's okay. Not the worst way to spend the time".
Yes!! Hallelujah! That's It! The Worst Film this Year!!
sepial27 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
We all love ourselves a good end of the world. At least when it's a movie. Mind you, there are those who are hoping beyond fiction, or the potential real causes for such a thing. I go with the movie flirtation. Amongst other things you can check out the latest state of the art in special effects. In latest years, when you pick a film starring the most overrated of all stars, you might just end up seeing an end of times variation. The line-up Nicholas Cage heads this time is for what must be Michelle Bachman's favourite movie.
The first part of the film you spend hoping it'll kick in soon, this end of the world, and with wondering if all the badness you chew yourself through is intended, say, as a reflection on cliché character set-up in a writer's cheek instead of a tongue. The music is of much help here, because it is as cheesy and clumsily clue-driven as the acting and the screenplay. Hunky hero meets girl on airport and they engage in meaningful witless conversation about tragic things; music on clue. Daddy has to fly a plane on his birthday and cannot be with daughter, so they have a heart to heart with only slightly different music on clue. Daughter right back to hunky hero, and the same music on clue as before. It gets worse, though.
Turns out the only reasonable person within the story's realm is mum, who everybody thought of as crazy, because she just knew what dawned, and it literally happens in a flash, and also quite literally as they say in the bible. Yes – it's the rapture!
Kids are lifted and saved, because they're good, and faithful Christians are saved, even if they're packing a gun. The rest are left with the, spooky, no, actually not, left with the comically empty clothes of those risen to Heaven and with having to figure it out, down on the ground, though not really, while making their way through the havoc unleashed by the ensuing panic, and up in the clouds, in every sense of the expression, trying to deal with airplane issues that include disappeared and now assumed naked passengers and a fuel leak over the Atlantic. And they do figure it out, the whole to be expected cast necessary for a Christian lecture tale, the drug addict, the gluttonous candy lover, the greedy business man, the angry midget, the vain stewardess and of course the wife-cheating captain alias Mr. Sad Puppy-Eyes. And once they figure it out they express regret over not having had time for the kids, being so job-orientated and, off camera and presumably cut, for eating so many candy bars. Again with much help by the music and an equally unoriginal, uninspired script.
We got action, since that plane needs to be landed safely, captain Puppy-Eyes resolving he cannot let those people die with all their sins on their minds, and we got family values, as daddy and daughter find back to one another via cell phone, plane-landing and other heroic acts that are potentially redeeming in the eye of the Lord.
Here's my favourite little detail. Amongst the predictable cast of washed together characters we also have the kind, gentle, friendly, reasonable and faithful Muslim. And he really is kind, gentle, friendly, reasonable and faithful. He takes care of the old lady shaken with fright, he does his part in settling conflicts. So no trouble with the orthodox end of Islam to be expected there. Also because they just might miss the bigger picture: here we have a deep believer in an only slightly different version of the same god, and he's good, he's faithful, he's all a deity can wish for, and yet he's among those who are NOT lifted to Heaven. Because he believes in this slightly different version. Yes. Oops.
And it all ends in the to be expected reunion of loved ones, having survived a near fatal plane-landing that went exactly the way we knew it would, now looking at the burning city and forward to years of darkness. After which they'll do fine, promise, as we've witnessed them finding back to faith.
The whole thing is one ugly piece of literal bible evening Christian propaganda coated in an excess of unhealthy sugar and aimed at the extremely gullible, made by those who have at this point only movie- making while waiting, salivating, for the real thing. And the viewer is the one left behind, with trying to decide whether Mr. Cage is either desperate and gropes for just any role offered to him, or whether he's a fundamentalist Christian himself, trying to contribute in spreading the message. And Zeus knows, this film is messagy.
It also confirms that with Christian issues-themed material it is very much as with right-wing humour: it doesn't work. It's uninspired, it's lacking fabric, ground to stand on and anything that can remotely approach convincing sense, and it inevitably results in fabulously bad acting.
Anything you wish to see that is already a huge set of steps up the ladder to quality, watch a Troma production. Which is, in these dark times, where I turn to in prayer: please, Troma, spoof this one!
The first part of the film you spend hoping it'll kick in soon, this end of the world, and with wondering if all the badness you chew yourself through is intended, say, as a reflection on cliché character set-up in a writer's cheek instead of a tongue. The music is of much help here, because it is as cheesy and clumsily clue-driven as the acting and the screenplay. Hunky hero meets girl on airport and they engage in meaningful witless conversation about tragic things; music on clue. Daddy has to fly a plane on his birthday and cannot be with daughter, so they have a heart to heart with only slightly different music on clue. Daughter right back to hunky hero, and the same music on clue as before. It gets worse, though.
Turns out the only reasonable person within the story's realm is mum, who everybody thought of as crazy, because she just knew what dawned, and it literally happens in a flash, and also quite literally as they say in the bible. Yes – it's the rapture!
Kids are lifted and saved, because they're good, and faithful Christians are saved, even if they're packing a gun. The rest are left with the, spooky, no, actually not, left with the comically empty clothes of those risen to Heaven and with having to figure it out, down on the ground, though not really, while making their way through the havoc unleashed by the ensuing panic, and up in the clouds, in every sense of the expression, trying to deal with airplane issues that include disappeared and now assumed naked passengers and a fuel leak over the Atlantic. And they do figure it out, the whole to be expected cast necessary for a Christian lecture tale, the drug addict, the gluttonous candy lover, the greedy business man, the angry midget, the vain stewardess and of course the wife-cheating captain alias Mr. Sad Puppy-Eyes. And once they figure it out they express regret over not having had time for the kids, being so job-orientated and, off camera and presumably cut, for eating so many candy bars. Again with much help by the music and an equally unoriginal, uninspired script.
We got action, since that plane needs to be landed safely, captain Puppy-Eyes resolving he cannot let those people die with all their sins on their minds, and we got family values, as daddy and daughter find back to one another via cell phone, plane-landing and other heroic acts that are potentially redeeming in the eye of the Lord.
Here's my favourite little detail. Amongst the predictable cast of washed together characters we also have the kind, gentle, friendly, reasonable and faithful Muslim. And he really is kind, gentle, friendly, reasonable and faithful. He takes care of the old lady shaken with fright, he does his part in settling conflicts. So no trouble with the orthodox end of Islam to be expected there. Also because they just might miss the bigger picture: here we have a deep believer in an only slightly different version of the same god, and he's good, he's faithful, he's all a deity can wish for, and yet he's among those who are NOT lifted to Heaven. Because he believes in this slightly different version. Yes. Oops.
And it all ends in the to be expected reunion of loved ones, having survived a near fatal plane-landing that went exactly the way we knew it would, now looking at the burning city and forward to years of darkness. After which they'll do fine, promise, as we've witnessed them finding back to faith.
The whole thing is one ugly piece of literal bible evening Christian propaganda coated in an excess of unhealthy sugar and aimed at the extremely gullible, made by those who have at this point only movie- making while waiting, salivating, for the real thing. And the viewer is the one left behind, with trying to decide whether Mr. Cage is either desperate and gropes for just any role offered to him, or whether he's a fundamentalist Christian himself, trying to contribute in spreading the message. And Zeus knows, this film is messagy.
It also confirms that with Christian issues-themed material it is very much as with right-wing humour: it doesn't work. It's uninspired, it's lacking fabric, ground to stand on and anything that can remotely approach convincing sense, and it inevitably results in fabulously bad acting.
Anything you wish to see that is already a huge set of steps up the ladder to quality, watch a Troma production. Which is, in these dark times, where I turn to in prayer: please, Troma, spoof this one!
Accidental comedy!
RevRonster8 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
The only real reason I watch Christian films ever is due to the reality that they are always good for a laugh. They always have characters and people reacting strangely, they believe that all of reality is simple and coated in colors of black and white, they are over-the-top and cheesy with their morals, messages and propaganda, and the acting is always terrible. I got all that and more from "Left Behind" and it made for a great accidental comedy.
First things first, this movie is boring—like the kind of boring where you find yourself hoping for chores to do or realizing you'd rather spend your time doing the things you actively avoid as the movie progresses. The film wants to believe it is thrilling with the peril that Nicolas Cage's character, the laughably named Captain Rayford Steele, finds himself in but the action unfolds so lethargically slow and so predictably that it's absolutely impossible for the film to be remotely exciting or even make your pulse move slightly faster. Secondly, the film wants to be uplifting and meaningful but the morals of the film are so messed up that they make the Christian faith look worse rather than better. The film "This Is the End" actually represents a better God than the one you see in this film.
Finally, the film has some really, absolutely atrocious acting. It's not really surprising when you consider the characters have absolutely no depth to them and are only defined by whether or not they have faith and, when they don't, are summed up by what sin is their favorite. However, even when this is taken into consideration, the cheesy, over-the-top, and hammy acting is very prevalent and is pretty amusing to watch. Especially when it comes to Nicolas Cage who is clearly unable to hide the fact that he is doing the film only for the paycheck and only decides to give a little bit of effort before the credits come rolling in.
"Left Behind" is nothing special or meaningful. It isn't groundbreaking, Earth-shattering, and it definitely didn't change my life or make me "find God." Instead, it amused and entertained me because it was so poorly put together and so easy to make fun of. It's possible to make a great film based on faith and religion that is moving and emotional this just wasn't one of them and was rather something absolutely silly much like "God's Not Dead."
I tip my hat to you and ask you how is your day, sir and/or madam! The name is Rev. Ron and if you feel like reading more of my rants, ramblings, bad jokes, geek references, and other movie reviews (like a more in-depth look at "Left Behind" and other films that actually make God look like a decent being) you can visit my blog at revronmovies.blogspot.com. If you don't want to do that because you have a plate full of ham in front of you and that stuff ain't going to eat itself, you don't need to visit.
First things first, this movie is boring—like the kind of boring where you find yourself hoping for chores to do or realizing you'd rather spend your time doing the things you actively avoid as the movie progresses. The film wants to believe it is thrilling with the peril that Nicolas Cage's character, the laughably named Captain Rayford Steele, finds himself in but the action unfolds so lethargically slow and so predictably that it's absolutely impossible for the film to be remotely exciting or even make your pulse move slightly faster. Secondly, the film wants to be uplifting and meaningful but the morals of the film are so messed up that they make the Christian faith look worse rather than better. The film "This Is the End" actually represents a better God than the one you see in this film.
Finally, the film has some really, absolutely atrocious acting. It's not really surprising when you consider the characters have absolutely no depth to them and are only defined by whether or not they have faith and, when they don't, are summed up by what sin is their favorite. However, even when this is taken into consideration, the cheesy, over-the-top, and hammy acting is very prevalent and is pretty amusing to watch. Especially when it comes to Nicolas Cage who is clearly unable to hide the fact that he is doing the film only for the paycheck and only decides to give a little bit of effort before the credits come rolling in.
"Left Behind" is nothing special or meaningful. It isn't groundbreaking, Earth-shattering, and it definitely didn't change my life or make me "find God." Instead, it amused and entertained me because it was so poorly put together and so easy to make fun of. It's possible to make a great film based on faith and religion that is moving and emotional this just wasn't one of them and was rather something absolutely silly much like "God's Not Dead."
I tip my hat to you and ask you how is your day, sir and/or madam! The name is Rev. Ron and if you feel like reading more of my rants, ramblings, bad jokes, geek references, and other movie reviews (like a more in-depth look at "Left Behind" and other films that actually make God look like a decent being) you can visit my blog at revronmovies.blogspot.com. If you don't want to do that because you have a plate full of ham in front of you and that stuff ain't going to eat itself, you don't need to visit.
Could have at least been fun, but no.
ejonconrad26 May 2015
First of all, full disclosure: I'm not a believer in the whole Rapture thing. Still, I'm willing to suspend disbelief for the sake of a movie. After all, I don't believe in hobbits, vampires, witches, The Force, etc, either. The truth is, though, I think I would hated this movie even *more* if I'd been a believer.
Let's face it, The Rapture is the ultimate middle finger to nonbelievers; the final "We told you so!", so it's strange that the movie puts religion in the back seat. The couple of overtly Christian characters are mealy mouthed and annoying, and we're kind of relieved when they're gone. The other "Christians" are pretty covert. For example, a stewardess seems more than happy to gossip with another about the latter's upcoming sexual tryst, without the need to lecture her on her behavior. It's only later, when we find "Bible Study" in ridiculously large block letters in her (by then abandoned) calendar that we learn the truth. If she'd kept her schedule on an iPhone, we might never have known.
Basically, the Rapture is just a vehicle for an action movie - a really, really lame action movie. The entire movie focuses on the fate of airline captain Rayford Steele and his plane, which I understand is just one part of the book. The central problem is that as long as one able-bodied pilot is left, The Rapture would really be more of an inconvenience than an emergency for a plane in flight. They get around this by throwing various obstacles in his path to build tension. These range from contrived to comically contrived, and in the end you've got something along the lines of an unfunny version of "Airplane!". I kept expecting Leslie Nielsen to come in and say "We're all counting on you".
Of course, the biggest disappointment is Cage himself. Nicholas Cage is a talented actor who is famous for taking absolutely any role to pay down his enormous debts. Still, even in the worst movies, he usually fully commits to the part, and you at least get some campy fun. The godawful remake of "Wicker Man" comes immediately to mind as a good example. If ever there was an excuse for his trademark histrionics, this is it, but his just mumbles through his lines, with the look of embarrassment never entirely leaving his face. He really looks like a man who's seriously questioning the choices that have led him to this - not in the movie, but in his actual life.
Not good, not "so bad it's good". Just a couple hours I'll never get back.
Let's face it, The Rapture is the ultimate middle finger to nonbelievers; the final "We told you so!", so it's strange that the movie puts religion in the back seat. The couple of overtly Christian characters are mealy mouthed and annoying, and we're kind of relieved when they're gone. The other "Christians" are pretty covert. For example, a stewardess seems more than happy to gossip with another about the latter's upcoming sexual tryst, without the need to lecture her on her behavior. It's only later, when we find "Bible Study" in ridiculously large block letters in her (by then abandoned) calendar that we learn the truth. If she'd kept her schedule on an iPhone, we might never have known.
Basically, the Rapture is just a vehicle for an action movie - a really, really lame action movie. The entire movie focuses on the fate of airline captain Rayford Steele and his plane, which I understand is just one part of the book. The central problem is that as long as one able-bodied pilot is left, The Rapture would really be more of an inconvenience than an emergency for a plane in flight. They get around this by throwing various obstacles in his path to build tension. These range from contrived to comically contrived, and in the end you've got something along the lines of an unfunny version of "Airplane!". I kept expecting Leslie Nielsen to come in and say "We're all counting on you".
Of course, the biggest disappointment is Cage himself. Nicholas Cage is a talented actor who is famous for taking absolutely any role to pay down his enormous debts. Still, even in the worst movies, he usually fully commits to the part, and you at least get some campy fun. The godawful remake of "Wicker Man" comes immediately to mind as a good example. If ever there was an excuse for his trademark histrionics, this is it, but his just mumbles through his lines, with the look of embarrassment never entirely leaving his face. He really looks like a man who's seriously questioning the choices that have led him to this - not in the movie, but in his actual life.
Not good, not "so bad it's good". Just a couple hours I'll never get back.
Rich Movie. Five Aircrafts Involved.
mumufacebook28 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Simply amazed by how many aircrafts they've used to shoot this movie.
At the gate: Airbus A300.
When it's flying: Boeing 767.
When the camera shoot the flight deck from outside (and yes, with Nicholas Cage in it): Boeing 747.
When it performed emergency landing (on a thin highway): Boeing 737.
When everybody is safe and sound, and the aircraft behind were shown laying around: Boeing 717.
Wow. They must be having soooo much money to use five different types of aircraft for one movie.
At the gate: Airbus A300.
When it's flying: Boeing 767.
When the camera shoot the flight deck from outside (and yes, with Nicholas Cage in it): Boeing 747.
When it performed emergency landing (on a thin highway): Boeing 737.
When everybody is safe and sound, and the aircraft behind were shown laying around: Boeing 717.
Wow. They must be having soooo much money to use five different types of aircraft for one movie.
They Only Left Behind 95% of the Novel
thesar-225 January 2015
Warning: Spoilers
When it took 32 minutes for set up and I remember only about 2% of the novel was setup AND the rest of the movie took place mostly on the plane, which was another 3% of the book, I knew they had to be pulling a Hobbit on us.
Unbelievably, the Kirk Cameron movie version of the first book of a series on the rapture was actually better than this remake, but only because of them sticking closer to the book, Left Behind. This one strayed so far from the meat of the story, they failed to even get to the main character of the antichrist.
Sad, after any Kirk Cameron film, especially one based on the book series I really enjoyed, I wanted someone to remake it with talent and a budget involved. They failed miserably here and like all those supposedly "Based on/Inspired by true stories," it seemed they took 5 minutes from what really happened and embellished the rest.
There is really not much to say here, as they said very little in the movie. Basically, and I am only summarizing the movie since there's 95% of the book you're missing, a broken family is trying to get back together while the world experiences a sudden disappearance of millions. They say "millions," but also all children vanish, which I would assume would probably be at least a billion. But, whatever.
The acting was bad, score terrible, songs blah, dialogue eh, they failed to fully commit to God (or even mention Jesus) as was the premise of the story and worst of all: No Cage Craziness when this movie needed it from beginning to end.
Normally when a movie is very, very bad, but I didn't hate it that much, I would at least give it 1½ stars out of 5. But, honestly, I saw absolutely no redeeming qualities here. EVEN if you haven't read the book. Skip it!
* * *
Final thoughts: That all said, I did manage to laugh out loud a couple of times all from unintentionally hilarious scenes. Too many to remember, but the boy in the beginning eavesdropping on his mother and sister and popping in and out from the hallway had me hopeful there would be more LOL segments. Maybe this will end up in a year or so on the "so-bad-it's-good" list, but right now there weren't enough scenes to ever make me watch this mess again. Too bad Cage didn't freak out – I might have raised my star rating for that.
Unbelievably, the Kirk Cameron movie version of the first book of a series on the rapture was actually better than this remake, but only because of them sticking closer to the book, Left Behind. This one strayed so far from the meat of the story, they failed to even get to the main character of the antichrist.
Sad, after any Kirk Cameron film, especially one based on the book series I really enjoyed, I wanted someone to remake it with talent and a budget involved. They failed miserably here and like all those supposedly "Based on/Inspired by true stories," it seemed they took 5 minutes from what really happened and embellished the rest.
There is really not much to say here, as they said very little in the movie. Basically, and I am only summarizing the movie since there's 95% of the book you're missing, a broken family is trying to get back together while the world experiences a sudden disappearance of millions. They say "millions," but also all children vanish, which I would assume would probably be at least a billion. But, whatever.
The acting was bad, score terrible, songs blah, dialogue eh, they failed to fully commit to God (or even mention Jesus) as was the premise of the story and worst of all: No Cage Craziness when this movie needed it from beginning to end.
Normally when a movie is very, very bad, but I didn't hate it that much, I would at least give it 1½ stars out of 5. But, honestly, I saw absolutely no redeeming qualities here. EVEN if you haven't read the book. Skip it!
* * *
Final thoughts: That all said, I did manage to laugh out loud a couple of times all from unintentionally hilarious scenes. Too many to remember, but the boy in the beginning eavesdropping on his mother and sister and popping in and out from the hallway had me hopeful there would be more LOL segments. Maybe this will end up in a year or so on the "so-bad-it's-good" list, but right now there weren't enough scenes to ever make me watch this mess again. Too bad Cage didn't freak out – I might have raised my star rating for that.
Good Gawd that's Awful
jeroduptown14 September 2021
Case study for why people hate Christian based film. Poorly written, adapted, acted, shot and edited. Cage's wife is the only one that's raptured and he's gotta land this plane (ConAir) with the help of us unsaved, estranged daughter.
Can this be the worst movie of all time
serpico-usa-137-94645219 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
I have seen bad movies, but this is a joke. Horrible acting ( did Nick Cage really once get an Academy award? )and a Director who hopefully will go and find a day job and get out of the business. The girl who plays Cage's daughter should audition for superwoman, a college grad who can drive a motor bike better than Evil Kneival, drive a SUV better than F1 drivers and oh my drive a front end loader on an under construction freeway she found and set off explosives that were left unattended on the roadway. Cage would have to get the award for wooden actor of the year as would the other so called actors. This movie deserves every bad criticism it has received. How I never walked out of the theater is amazing. The Christians are upset because of the bad reviews saying its because its about the bible. Wrong it is just a bad pathetically made movie that should not even go to DVD. Did I read that there are 2 more sequels planned? God help us.
A new Deep even for Cage in this Christian Propaganda Movie
quasides23 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
I really start to feel sorry for him. He once again proofs that he is going to do anything for Money :)
OK lets aside the real questionable premise, this is not only Christian, this is radical Christian. Where Christion Nutjobs go to heaven while decent but not really believing humans beings are gonna damned.
But beside that premise nothing in this Movie makes sense, or is even close to real. Why should Satphone stop working. Why roller(bole don't know in English) suddenly roll with like 1 meter a minute. Or why do have planes an elevator thats allow to go down but not up. and so on ***SPOILERS AHEAD*** other than that the movie don't really bring something. its basically all about a plane who got hit in the air (yea well anti collision systems are not in this movie present).
if you expect Armageddon and action well, not so much. a plane looses half his passengers, get hit by another and humped home. but for some reason no airport is operational even most of the staff didn't disappear and the daughter someone cleans up a field to land on. story end. only the last sentence promise "this is just the beginning"...
*** SPOILERS END ***
So now lets go back to the questionable Premise. First of all i was raised Christian even i consider myself more an Atheist is still leave people to their believe and i don't mind to see a "believers" movie from time to time.
But this piece of Junk is radical questionable Christian propaganda.
It's judgmental by implicating that even the slightest human weakness, the slightest criticism will leave you behind, will dam you. Nothing but regret by the characters for their "sins" even they aren't sins, they are just normal human weaknesses, nobody is f.ing perfect for f. sake.
But be careful, its made smart, its made silent, implicating things, not so much screaming but enough. Read between the lines, not only whats in the Movie but also whats not.
Seriously whoever is behind this piece of excremental those people are dangerous and this is their propaganda.
This is simply Nuts.
To the Makers: See ya in Hell
OK lets aside the real questionable premise, this is not only Christian, this is radical Christian. Where Christion Nutjobs go to heaven while decent but not really believing humans beings are gonna damned.
But beside that premise nothing in this Movie makes sense, or is even close to real. Why should Satphone stop working. Why roller(bole don't know in English) suddenly roll with like 1 meter a minute. Or why do have planes an elevator thats allow to go down but not up. and so on ***SPOILERS AHEAD*** other than that the movie don't really bring something. its basically all about a plane who got hit in the air (yea well anti collision systems are not in this movie present).
if you expect Armageddon and action well, not so much. a plane looses half his passengers, get hit by another and humped home. but for some reason no airport is operational even most of the staff didn't disappear and the daughter someone cleans up a field to land on. story end. only the last sentence promise "this is just the beginning"...
*** SPOILERS END ***
So now lets go back to the questionable Premise. First of all i was raised Christian even i consider myself more an Atheist is still leave people to their believe and i don't mind to see a "believers" movie from time to time.
But this piece of Junk is radical questionable Christian propaganda.
It's judgmental by implicating that even the slightest human weakness, the slightest criticism will leave you behind, will dam you. Nothing but regret by the characters for their "sins" even they aren't sins, they are just normal human weaknesses, nobody is f.ing perfect for f. sake.
But be careful, its made smart, its made silent, implicating things, not so much screaming but enough. Read between the lines, not only whats in the Movie but also whats not.
Seriously whoever is behind this piece of excremental those people are dangerous and this is their propaganda.
This is simply Nuts.
To the Makers: See ya in Hell
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