Plot Summary
When Seth’s father leaves under the guise of getting a new job, he never returns, which leaves the family in their financial straits. Then Seth’s mother dies from selling her blood too much, which leaves Seth to take care of his little sister. He decides that he needs to go to college and invest in gold so that he can become rich. But he will have to decide what he thinks about his late mother’s faith in order to move forward.
Production Quality (1 point)
Though this film had a decent budget, it still does not have a good enough production. Video quality and camera work are once again the only good elements. Audio quality is quite poor and the soundtrack is very generic. Sets, locations, and props are very cheap and limited. There are a lot of montages and dead sequences, which reflect the terrible editing work. Basically, we haven’t figured out where the Stronger Foundation team gets their money from, but they are squandering it at a rate only rivaled by Timothy Chey.
Plot and Storyline Quality (0 points)
Unfortunately, it seems as though most of Strong Foundation’s plots are utterly pointless. This so-called story is reminiscent of a FaithHouse creation due to its childish and empty characters and its extremely juvenile dialogue and premise. The main character is very downtrodden and there is a lot of laughable and forced melodrama. The Christian message is also, of course, extremely plastic and off-putting. It feels like this story was written by a five-year-old as everything is fixed in the end and just generally has a juvenile feel to it. It’s very difficult to understand how movies like this are made.
Acting Quality (0 points)
Josiah David Warren and his typical cast comrades are at it again in this film, with very unsure and sometimes whiny performances. Emotions are either over the top or nonexistent and line delivery is stunted. Basically, this cast is in need of some serious coaching.
Conclusion
We are interested to know who gives Strong Foundations Films a basic blank check to allow Sun Hui East and Josiah David Warren to do basically whatever they want. The stories they come up with really seem like they came from a bunch of kids making up stories while playing with their toys, combined with a cheap Christian message. We are greatly unsure as to what the ultimate goal with these movies is, but we hope to forget they even exist.
Final Rating: 1 out of 10 points
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