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The Masked Saint (2016)

The Masked Saint (2016)

GENRESAction,Biography,Crime,Drama,Family,Fantasy
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Brett GranstaffLara Jean ChorosteckiT.J. McGibbonDiahann Carroll
DIRECTOR
Warren P. Sonoda

SYNOPSICS

The Masked Saint (2016) is a English movie. Warren P. Sonoda has directed this movie. Brett Granstaff,Lara Jean Chorostecki,T.J. McGibbon,Diahann Carroll are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2016. The Masked Saint (2016) is considered one of the best Action,Biography,Crime,Drama,Family,Fantasy movie in India and around the world.

"The Masked Saint" is based on a true story about one pastor's mission to help his community by risking his identity and returns to his former life as a wrestler. The triumphant story follows one man's journey and struggle between helping others and the consequences he faces doing this.

The Masked Saint (2016) Reviews

  • R.I.P. "Rowdy" Roddy Piper.

    anaconda-406582016-02-03

    The Masked Saint (2016): Dir: Warren P. Sonoda / Cast: Brett Granstaff, Lara Jean Chorostecki, Patrick McKenna, Diahann Carroll, Roddy Piper: Better than average faith based film that takes Christianity and faith and crosses them with physical trials. Brett Granstaff plays a wrestler called The Saint, who dresses in white and wears a mask. After an injury he decides to pastor a church in a dangerous neighbourhood. While the church is in dire need of repairs, he finds his preaching less than effective. He soon becomes a local hero when donning the mask renders him fighting crimes in the street. This is much more ambitious than most of its kind with a decent setup and detailed structure. The ending is predictable with that preachy delivery that will turn off anyone outside of Christianity. Acting is also terribly over the top although Brett Granstaff as Chris Samuels does his best as the struggling preacher who learns that his strength might be fighting demons in the ring. Lara Jean Chorostecki plays his wife Michelle who discovers that she is pregnant with their second child. They already have a young daughter. Patrick McKenna has the unfortunate role of Judd Lumpkin, a bully type whose money finances the church. Just as bad is Diahann Carroll as Ms. Edna in a role that echos the War Room lady. Unfortunately "Rowdy" Roddy Piper passed away after completing this film. He plays a cynical promoter who decides to take the belt off the Saint and give it to the Reaper, a towering monster heel wrestler. While average in production Christians will grasp its message of being fighters and saints in the ring of life. Score: 6 / 10

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  • Sensationalism triumphs the human spirit

    StevePulaski2016-01-11

    Ever since the huge success of God's Not Dead, the staunchly evangelical film that coincidentally stole a great deal of buzz away from Noah, another film with a faith-based background, studios like Pure Flix Entertainment and Freestyle Releasing have been finding more and more Christian titles to pick up for a theatrical release. Even Hollywood has recognized that a large part of the Christian market as ostensibly been disenfranchised with a lack of titles that appeal or pertain the faith of their audience, and with that, has even looked to make movies like Heaven is for Real and Son of God. To put it boldly, The Masked Saint is another mediocre link in the chain, poorly conceived and unable to function as a story without making bombastic, theatrical displays of situational drama and conflict. It makes the same mistake most of its brother and sister films make because it doesn't know how to function as a film without sermonizing or blowing each event that tests its characters and their faith out of proportion. Being that this film focuses largely on the world of wrestling and the dualities of character, you can also expect the entire project to be just as phony and overblown as anything you'll see on Monday Night Raw. The film revolves around the true story of Chris Samuels (Brett Granstaff), a former professional wrestler who retires from the ring to settle down and become the pastor of a failing church in a small town. While he is supported unconditionally by his wife Michelle (Lara Jean Chorostecki) and daughter, he is met with opposition from the church's main financial backer Judd (Patrick McKenna), who believes the church is entirely his. In addition, Chris sees the brokenness of his community, as crime, prostitution, and rampant godlessness prevails every day, right down to his next-door neighbors, the husband a boorish alcoholic and the wife a victim of his violent rampages. While the core of the story is about Chris getting people back into the church and welcoming people with open arms - even a prostitute who is looking for redemption - it's also about Chris finding a way to combat the violence by putting on part of his wrestler costume in order to take the city's problems into his own hands. This involves rescuing the aforementioned prostitute, in addition to stopping a robbery in a local diner. Then, at the end of it all, there's Nicky (Roddy Piper in his final role), Chris's old wrestling manager and promoter hellbent on getting him to come back into the ring. At one moment, The Masked Saint is content on being a drama about a man's determination to get a ramshackle eyesore of a church back to being a well-respected community staple of salvation and redemption. The next, it's trying to excite by showing Chris beat up bad guys like Spider-Man and spout unbelievably contrived and poorly delivered responses like "I'm a man" when somebody tells him, "you're a saint." The Masked Saint cannot operate on the basis of a simple drama and has to occupy its more climactic sequences with incredulous action or cloying sermonizing that sounds like a pedestrian's summation of the good parts of the Bible. As far as emotional manipulation goes, screenwriter Scott Crowell keeps things to a respectable minimum, as he's clearly more concerned with respecting the real-life Samuels and his family by giving them a story rooted in plot and character rather than emotions. However, relationships and events that initially appear as if they'll have a significant pull on the film wind up either getting permanently placed on the backburner or hamfisted in the screenplay in a last-ditch effort to evoke some kind of tension or conflict. For one, the emotionally and physically abusive husband only punctuates the script, when he initially seems like he'll be an integral part of Chris's plan to save the people of his community. After one tense confrontation between him and Chris, an event that mirrors anything but what would happen in reality, the husband is all of a sudden transformed in looks and attitude the next time he crosses paths with the pastor he formerly loathed. The other element is Chris's stress level with going back to wrestling whilst trying to run the church. In one scene, he is lectured by Ms. Edna (Diahann Carroll - because every Christian film needs that stereotypical, warm black lady who allows anyone and everyone in her home to coddle), a supportive resident of the community, for being too strict and self-indulgent, behavior he hasn't really exhibited up until the following scene where he snaps at his wife and daughter out of nowhere. These kinds of disjointed elements only make the other issues of sensationalism embedded in The Masked Saint's screenplay rise to the surface much quicker and in a more evident fashion. Last year's faith-based football drama Woodlawn showed us that an approach to a film that highlights faith and devout religious beliefs can, in turn, derail or further cripple an otherwise true story that already feels too good to be true. The Masked Saint tries to do something out of left-field with a different sport and an unlikely hero, but quickly falls prey to the worst conventions of the genre and the material. It's a noble effort but a result that's just about entirely unmemorable.

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  • Unorthodox & Meaningful

    PerryHartman2016-01-13

    This movie is NOTHING like any other faith based film ever created. For one, it's based on a true story, so whether if you think it works or not, IT IS TRUE. Two, it's quality will not disappoint. Professional Wrestler Chris Whaley (Samuels, in the movie), quits wrestling to become a Pastor. Now if this doesn't intrigue you, I don't know what will. The story is incredible, the wrestling is great, the characters are superb and the quality is like no other faith based film ever produced. If I had three thumbs, they all would go up. A GREAT MOVIE! This movie changed my life and I think that is the #1 purpose for a faith based movie. Many were overly critical about the film, but not once did they ever complain about the cinematography. Why? Because the quality is AWESOME!

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  • A laughably bad faith-based film.

    PeterLormeReviews2016-05-04

    The Masked Saint (2016) is a laughably bad faith-based film. Was I expecting a good film? Hell no. The film had terrible performances, cringe-worthy dialogue and bland direction. However, I didn't hate myself while watching this movie. The wrestling scenes were so laughably bad,that I found myself constantly on the edge of my seat laughing. Over-the-top is the best way to describe them. The film is unfunny when it is trying to be funny, and funny when it isn't trying to be funny. Faith-based films are generally terrible, but I found some enjoyment in this one. When grading this film, I can't ignore how truly atrocious it is on a film-making level. 'The Masked Saint' is heinous, but absurdly fun. It is on the level of a "so bad it's good" film.

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  • Christian Wrestling at it's finest!

    subxerogravity2016-01-19

    I've been aware that Christ and Wrestling go well together for a few years now, and now the Mask Saint is the movie to prove it. It reminds me of the faith based film, I'm in Love With a Church Girl, but while that movie hit you with the speech about how Christ loves Hip Hop, the Mask Saint, like a good wrestling movie should, comes down to the point that talk is cheap. But the wrestling is not. Though you can tell(mostly by their size) that most of the actors may not be wrestlers in a past life, that did not stop them from giving us some impressive in the ring scenes. It was pretty action packed and exciting. Outside the ring, it's a cool story about a vigilante in a wrestling mask whose secret identity is that of a Pastor in the neighborhood church. The fact that this really happen makes it even more interesting. Over all it's a good low end superhero flick about Christian wrestling worthy of being the late great Rowdy Roddy Piper's last.

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