Lunch with a True Hero

JillA series of connections fell like dominos over the past two weeks that culminated in me being at lunch with two brilliant women: a ghostwriter (who will remain anonymous—I hope the irony isn’t lost on you); and, a true American hero.

Colonel Jill Morgenthaler U.S. Army (Ret.) shared several life stories with me from her father’s spy activities when she was a small child, to her being in the first wave of women entering the army (83 women on base with 50,000 men), to her facedown with Saddam Hussein. The battles she fought and the ones she disarmed were amazing to hear.

One of her many great stories took place when she was a Captain. The lanterns hanging over her strategic planning table flickered as the night breeze rattled across her tent. The sun over Bosnia had set and the temperature was dropping. Jill had little time to plan the strategy for the next day’s convoy before they’d have to adjust for the twenty-degree dip in temperature that hit every night.

Blocks representing each vehicle were meticulously placed on the map. The best path took the convoy through the village of angry people that hit the United Nations personnel earlier in the day. Few survived unscathed, giving her great pause when considering their tactics. The one difference between the U.N.’s team and Jill’s—her team was trained in lethal force.

But leadership is never that simple. Jill was under orders to avoid firing on civilians. Oh, they held the right to protect themselves using deadly force, if necessary. But the time consumption related to the myriad of paperwork that follows, forces all good leaders to avoid the easy way out and instead to focus solely on their charge. Jill was responsible and determined to avoid harm coming to her soldiers, the interpreters and reporters in the convoy, and also, to the civilians who might attack.

The next day, members of the convoy were jittery as the team loaded up the vehicles. None of them wanted to get beaten up by an angry mob, nor did they want to break orders by killing civilians. Jill found herself in one of those moments that required her, as the leader, to demonstrate what courage looked like to the people in her convoy.

The dangers were self-explanatory based on the attack the day before, but she reiterated the danger in a calm, factual manner, followed by sharing their plotted out tactics from the night before. When she saw confidence rise in the eyes of the press, she emphasized that the team would leave no one behind. Fear was replaced with patriotism on the faces of those in her care. She had a mission to achieve and it was time to set out and accomplish it.

Clouds spun in the air from the tires as they crossed the dusty terrain. The village seemed quaint, but its history of bloodshed squelched any comforting thoughts of pleasant villagers. The armed convoy moved swiftly through the streets with purpose, not wanting to give the surprised villagers a leg up on the situation.

After spotting the convoy, one villager raised a big rock above his head and ran at Jill. He made a slashing throat sign signaling others to lift their sticks and boards into the air and charge the convoy. She looked directly into the eyes of the man running at her and blew him a kiss. He stopped dead in his tracks. He lowered his rock with a stunned look on his face. His entourage also froze in their tracks, dropping their weapons.

The convoy made it rapidly and safely through the village without incident. Jill’s strategy had worked and her tactics were effective. No one from either side had been injured.

Who she was, what she knew and what she choose to do made a substantial difference in the outcome of that day’s events. The courage she called upon to properly execute her tactical plan also made a difference to the Americans in her care.

I was taken aback by how her simple gesture executed at the precise moment changed the course of history. Her use of courage coupled with her personality-enriched choice was sufficient for the day’s success.

© 2017 by CJ Powers

Logan vs. The Shack

Watching both films during opening weekend gave me a perspective that I hadn’t expected. Logan had a powerful message about self-sacrifice and unconditional love that many faith-based filmmakers would die for. The Shack on the other hand had a montage of messages that caused me to forget the one that seemed important to me at the time. The convoluted messages weakened the entire story.

Logan had great actors playing at the top of their game. Hugh Jackman and Patrick Stewart both hit grand slams with their multi-dimensional characters. The Shack also had greatness in Oscar® winner Octavia Spenser, but she was limited by playing a one-dimensional character, as was Sam Worthington.

The greatest weakness displayed by The Shack came from the writer breaking the cardinal rule of screenplay adaptation. The main story in the book (plot A) was about Mac’s journey from justified hatred to forgiveness, working through his abusive childhood and the loss of his daughter to a pedophile killer. The secondary story (plot B) was about the search for his kidnaped daughter, the serial killer, and finding closure from the crime.

For a successful adaptation to work on screen, plot-B must become the main story and plot-A must become the secondary story in order to create direction, action and pacing. By not doing this, the audience finds themselves eavesdropping on a man’s slow, methodical therapy session for the majority of the film. Had the writer switched the plotlines the story would’ve turned into a great thriller with multi-dimensional characters.

Instead, the writer decided to stay true to the book, which can’t be done properly in another medium. This decision killed the film from taking off as a general audience hit and confined it to a faith-based audience. When a show like the Lion King is taken from a successful film and turned into a Broadway hit, no one questions the necessary story transformation of the film and stage media.

But, some forget the differences between a book and film, which requires just as much transformation to shift the story from one medium to the other. The physical medium itself requires story changes to keep faithful to the original work.

Logan also held steady to its Marvel canon, while The Shack broke its biblical canon 11 times according to Berean Research. This breaking away from its beloved truths sent some panicking and protesting. Many true faith-based fans avoided the film for that very reason, and who can blame them? No one wants to watch a Star Trek movie that breaks the beloved Roddenberry canon.

Yet, there are plenty of churches that agreed to watch the film in support of the slow growing faith-based pool of films, so it should land around $60-70MM when all is said and done. But, had the story been structured for the medium with multi-dimensional characters, the story would have come in around $200-$250MM based on similar structured stories from the past.

I fully enjoyed Logan because it was a solid story with a Judeo-Christian worldview and phenomenal acting. I did not get my monies worth from The Shack because it was a poorly structured story, its message was an eclectic mix of several religions, and the talent was wasted with one-dimensional characters.

While I would’ve preferred a PG-13 version of Logan instead of its R-rating, I whole-heartedly enjoyed the story. The best part was watching the characters struggle with the human condition. At first Logan took the selfish route to alleviate his own pain, yet deep inside he still chose to help the professor. Then by the midpoint Logan is faced with the reality of love and its true meaning. After fighting with his internal issues, he succumbs to his heart and accepts what is true and right. He charges forward into act 3 demonstrating unconditional love through self-sacrifice for others—dying for his daughter and her friends.

The Shack could have been just as powerful, but the filmmakers chose a different path. It’s too bad people are supporting those bad choices, as the filmmaker will continue to make the same mistakes going forward because of his “success.”

 

 

 

Movies Bring Hope and Direction to Society

Behind the Scenes with CJ PowersSince the Great Depression (1929-1939) the motion picture industry understood their lot in life was to bring hope and direction to society and dove into mass production. This was confirmed and continued during World War II (1939-1945). Even the post war rebuilding years (1946-1952) were palatable thanks to the movies, which only cost a few coins to attend. By the time our country was back on its feet in 1963-64, the cinema’s role in America was labeled the Golden Age of movies (1933-1963, some sources use 1927-1964).

The Hays Motion Picture code was enacted during these early years to make sure films for the general public were appropriate, respectful and encouraging. After all, hope and direction were important causes worth monitoring. But by 1964 the committee that managed the code and approved scripts that made it to the silver screen was pressured by its denominational headquarters to leave the “ungodly world of Hollywood.”

While some films continued to bring hope and a wholesome and unifying direction to Americans, other films brought the opposite. Freedom of speech was challenged beyond what was wholesome. Directional bias toward liberal and aggressive thinking rose in power. The movies moved into a period known as post-classical cinema followed by the angst and spectacle periods.

Today, America is in need of a new hope and a new wholesome direction. It’s the movie industry’s job to provide it, as it did during the Golden Age of cinema. Unfortunately most producers today are looking for message films to support their politics or their religion. Few care about making the types of films that will bring hope and a healthy perspective to the general public.

The more polarized our communities become, the more important it is for the movies to help bring a sense of unity back to the people. But who will heed the call?

Until artists of today find a way to bring unity back into the lives of our beloved characters, stories will continue to divide the population. It’s the duty of filmmakers to reach the general population with new ideas and unifying stories that can emotionally move the audience from our old destructive path to a new thesis world filled with hope.

There is a hungry world waiting anxiously for such films. They long to embrace them, but can’t find any in our noise filled market. Someone must step up and kickoff this new trend that is sure to be supported by people from various walks of life. Where is the first filmmaker ready to take the risk and cross over? When he or she steps forward, will you support that new breed of film? If so, you’ll be a part of bringing a new hope and direction to our society.

© 2017 by CJ Powers