LAST OUNCE OF COURAGE

     PALESTINE - One category of movie is generally known as Dilemma and involves an expansivearray of poltlines, configurations, and styles. One sub-genre within Dilemma is a quite newest phenomena: the motivational movie. Back in the beginning of showmanship, many if not most films were designed as motivational a least to some level.

     But as the movie market grown up, such naivete was removed for gritty realistic look, and inspirational stories were banished to kid's films. Later these became maily made-for-TV films. These were films that espoused the value of family and intergenerational relationship, and were usually seen as sappy values stories.

     Nowdays, several separate movie companies have raised from the dead the movie companies have raised from the dead the motivational sub-genre with some commonly promoted releases: "Soul Visitor," "One Night with the Master," "Dolphin Tale" and Fireproof" come to mind. While not as slickly expert as as common showmanship sand up, these films have amazing attraction and show a ham-handed truthfulness that is amazing. The newest inclusion to this sub-genre is "Last ounces of Bravery." 

      The program, co-written by home Darrel Campbell and director/producer Kevin McAfee, high alternates between super psychological showmanship and day-to-day tediumis at periods sophomoric. But it reveals a truthfulness that is at periods grasping, and comments a feeling that is exclusively United states. Meaning is widespread in the names: Bob will carry the information that our United States liberties are under strike, so he is normally known as Revere. This is not an brazenly spiritual movie yet it clearly recognizes christianity as a aspect in the development of the liberties we keep special. Not one landscape is shot in a cathedral. The most obviously religious landscape is a memorial, and it is exciting to comparison this with the memorial landscape in "Extremely Noisy and Amazingly Close," which was deliberately nonreligious.