With ‘Woodlawn,’ Christian Films Enter New Playing Field

The Woodlawn High School football team, led by defensive coordinator Jerry Stearns (Kevin Sizemore, center left) and head coach Tandy Gerelds (Nic Bishop), pause to pray before an important game in 'Woodlawn.'
Share:

Never underestimate the power of pigskin and prayer.

When the government mandated that Woodlawn High School desegregate in 1973, riots and cross burnings ignited Birmingham, Ala. But after a chaplain visited the high-school football team, future Miami Dolphins running back Tony Nathan and more than 40 of his black and white teammates chose to dedicate their lives to God: praying together at practice, meeting for Bible study after school, and ultimately helping to unite the town.

As Birmingham natives, faith-based filmmakers Jon and Andrew Erwin were inspired to bring the true story to the screen in Woodlawn (in theaters Friday, Oct. 16), starring Jon Voight, Sean Astin and Caleb Castille.

“It was an anomaly event where an entire football team at once made a decision to love God and to love each other, in a school and a city that didn’t know what that meant,” says Jon Erwin. “Faith was an absolutely essential part of this story. It wasn’t politicians that led the Civil Rights Movement, it was pastors.”

Made for less than $15 million and opening on 1,500 screens, Woodlawn could pull in anywhere from $5 million to $10 million its first weekend, predicts Phil Contrino, lead analyst at BoxOffice.com.

A sports movie with Christian themes “sounds great on paper,” says Contrino, although he doesn’t foresee it reaching the heights of recent faith-based dramas War Room($64.1 million total), Heaven Is for Real ($91.4 million) or Son of God ($59.7 million), all deemed surprise hits by the media when they opened in 2014 and 2015.

“That narrative should definitely be retired — we should never be surprised,” Contrino says. “There’s a huge amount of people in this country that identify themselves as Christian. It’s not a niche, it’s not a specialized market, it’s a huge segment of the population.”

While Hollywood has never been able to match the heights of Mel Gibson’s controversial The Passion of the Christ in 2004 ($370.3 million), “the potential is always there, for sure,” Contrino adds.

Faith-based movies are more likely to cross over to a broader audience if they have established brands behind them, says DeVon Franklin, who appears in Woodlawn and is producing the upcoming Miracles From Heaven, starring Jennifer Garner, out next year. 

War Room, which topped the box office last month, is from director Alex Kendrick, whose Fireproof (2008) and Courageous (2011) each earned more than $30 million on budgets less than $2 million. Similarly, Christian super-producers Mark Burnett and Roma Downey produced Son of God and Woodlawn, and endorsed Heaven Is for Real

With these movies, “the faith is what leads the conversation,” Franklin says. “But because it’s coming from a trusted brand, your opportunity to do more at the box office is greater, because audiences anticipate these next films.”

The Erwin brothers have yet to establish themselves as box-office draws: Their past efforts, last year’s comedy Moms’ Night Out and 2011 drama October Baby, pulled in an OK $10.4 million and $5.4 million, respectively. But they have faith in the future of Christian cinema and believe there is enough interest from audiences to continue making them on a bigger scale.

“In five to seven years, we’ll see Christian blockbusters,” Jon Erwin predicts. “We’ll see faith-based films that are as big and competing with Jurassic World. We have the numbers, we have the resources, we’re marching up that mountain together. (There’s) a couple dozen of us that are forging ahead.

“Sean Astin said to me the other day, ‘Jon, I see you and Andy as pioneers or frontiersmen.’ I said, ‘That’s a great compliment. Only trouble is, most frontiersmen die on the frontier.’ “

+ posts
Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

Lightning shattering a lock.

Jentezen Franklin: Fasting for Your Breakthrough

What is fasting? Since there are so many misconceptions about it, I first want to clarify what fasting—biblical fasting—is not. Fasting is not merely going without food for a period of time. That is dieting—maybe even starving— but fasting it...

Crowd worshipping

7 Typical Prophetic Buzzwords Given to Hype Crowds

Every year, many prophetic words are given to start the new year. Many prophetic words are just repetitive rewordings of previously hyped-up words. However, are they really prophetic words? With all the prophetic lunacy in much of the charismatic church...

Lee Grady

6 Areas to Pray for Deliverance from the Evil One

In a crazed and divided divided world, it’s easy to see the evil all around. There’s the breakdown of the family unit, drugs, violence and addiction, all screaming the vices that have taken hold of our modern-day world. And yet,...

Ryan Howard with former President Donald Trump

Is Trump God’s Chosen Instrument?

I recently met and prayed in private with Donald Trump, along with a dozen other ministry leaders, before he went on stage in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The opportunity came shortly after I endorsed Trump for president, an endorsement also made...

Badly torn American flag

Could America Become a Christian Nation Once Again?

They were called Dissenting Protestants, Nonconformists and Radical Reformers, and they were the ones who provided the philosophical and theological principles on which America was founded. They emphasized religious liberty and freedom of conscience and insisted that governmental force should...

1 2 3 4 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top