Saved!

2004 "Heaven help us."
6.7| 1h32m| PG-13| en
Details

Mary is a good Christian girl who goes to a good Christian high school where she has good Christian friends and a perfect Christian boyfriend. Her life seems perfect, until the day that she finds out that her boyfriend may be gay — and that she’s pregnant.

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Reviews

Pacionsbo Absolutely Fantastic
Dirtylogy It's funny, it's tense, it features two great performances from two actors and the director expertly creates a web of odd tension where you actually don't know what is happening for the majority of the run time.
Murphy Howard I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.
Mandeep Tyson The acting in this movie is really good.
Tony I was christened, baptised and confirmed as a Catholic, taught righteousness by nuns at school. Then at a certain age I started asking why, or more importantly withdrew my blind faith. If God wants to punish me then fine, you're not my kind of God anyway. That's basically the central theme in this film, how all mainstream religions are nothing like the ideals set out by the leading texts they're founded on. This film is irreverent only in the satirical way, you can't preach morals if you make and break them at will.There is an interesting section of the film when the virgin birth is sort of questioned. Earlier examples would be how many Greek heroes were the sons of Zeus as his mortal father had been away fighting the past year. It's just a fun film, so if you are religious you can watch and laugh at so many apostates condemning themselves to eternal hell.Is it funny or strange how religions always have this sadistic element to them.
willhaskew Mary Cummings (Jena Malone), is an American Eagle Christian High School senior at the top of the social order as part of the Christian Jewels with her friends, Hilary Faye (Mandy Moore) and Veronica (Elizabeth Thai). While hanging out at the swimming pool in Mary's backyard, her boyfriend, Dean Withers (Chad Faust), tells her he might be gay. Her surprised reaction causes Mary to bump her head and she sees what believes is a religious vision telling her to try and help save Dean. After a conversation with Hilary about spiritual rebirth, in a shooting range of all places, Mary comes to the conclusion that she will sacrifice her physical virginity to help Dean. Despite all this, Mary learns that Dean's parents find a stash of gay pornography in his room and send him to a spiritual retreat/psychological clinic to be deprogrammed or 'cured' of his homosexuality. To her further shock, Mary believes she might be pregnant.Her pregnancy makes her an outcast, so Mary befriends Jewish student Cassandra (Eva Amurri), Hilary's brother Dean(Macaulay Culkin) and the principal Pastor Skip's son Dean (Patrick Fugit) who form a new system of support for her. Everybody seems to hiding something in this movie, including Pastor Skip, who's separated but divorced and carrying on a relationship with Cassandra's single mom. Everything comes to a head by the time for prom, though.
kandit1 This is someone's terrible view of American Evangelicals. High school students who believe in God are all naive, ignorant airheads. They are conniving, judgmental and shallow. The main character doesn't even know how to use an electric toothbrush for crying out loud.What are non-Christians in this movie? They are cool because they smoke, have pre-marital sex and ridicule Christians by calling them freaks. One line by Macaulay Culkin actually has him saying that the only reason a Christian would be at a Planned Parenthood clinic is to plant a pipe bomb! A completely unrealistic, offensive movie and I'm not even an Evangelical. Anyone who finds this entertaining must be a complete hypocrite.
Steve Pulaski "Religion is a mind control, you're kept in place with your beliefs. They've made you into human cattle, it's easy to heard the sheep." - Eigh8t the Chosen One, Government.I waited about a month to write a review of Saved! because I wanted to collect my thoughts and ideas slowly and efficiently. not being religious and having only minimal knowledge to say after I watched the film, I felt I needed to think a bit more about this one. Surely there was more to say than the four paragraph review I planned out earlier but cancelled.The best thing with Saved! is it's a satire. It takes old, high school comedy film roles and modifies them to fit its premise. Usually in the high school comedy genre, the villain is the pretty, self absorbed, world-revolves-around-me-not-you-losers cheerleader. In Saved! the villain is the biggest Bible gripping, God lover of them all. Now that's funny! Besides being religious and very Christian based, Saved! is also a coming of age film that gives incite on the topic of religion to people like me who have little to no knowledge. I've never been religious and don't want to be for one reason; it causes nothing but problems. We've had so many wars fought over religion and people still say it is harmless. Some may find solace in it, but I certainly don't. I hate fighting over political and religious topics with people. It is not worth losing a friendship.I also hate people that try to push religion down other's throats. I say if you're very religious, you've "spoke" to God, and you believe it is the right path, more power to you. But if you do all of that, and try to force me into doing it too by preaching to me some sayings and getting me to "confess to the lord" then we got a problem. When I have a problem, I don't turn to the Bible. I get up off of my ass and fix it myself. Not wait for God to do it. I believe in God. I believe there is someone that created us, loves us, and really believes in us. But that is the extent. I am not an avid church goer, I in fact set foot in a church about two weeks ago for the first time in nine years to go to a friend's confirmation.On with the film, Saved! focuses on a group of Seniors at American Eagle Christian High School. We have the good girl Mary (Malone), the big Christian Hilary (Moore), her handicapped brother Roland (Culkin), and the goth, Jewish, bad girl Cassandra (Amurri). After being told be her boyfriend Dean (Faust) that he may gay, Mary decides to try and "get rid of" these horrible feelings by having sex with Dean. When Dean is sent to get saved, Mary realizes she is pregnant and is trying to cope with adulthood, her boyfriend's sexual orientation and her school issues all in one.I'm a Christian. I do little to practice my religion. I celebrate Easter and Christmas very lightly and, like I stated above, I'm no avid church goer. I absolutely despise people who are against gay marriage which is why I don't practice my religion. Being gay is nothing bad. It's we as a society who hate different people and chose to mock them to a point of suicide or hatred of who they are. Christians are incredibly naive for believing gay marriage in "unethical." I have numerous gay friends boy and girl and no they do not "hit on me." They are normal and accepting. As we all should be.Google "Christians are (space}" and see what lovely rep they get. They are called; hate filled hypocrites, annoying, ignorant, narrow minded, weird, delusional, mean, jerks, bigots, and a load of other things. I want no part of a religion that is mocked by a whole slew of people. It isn't worth it.Saved! is wonderful with its witty humor, life lessons, and lively cast. know I complained a lot in my review, but it's my honest views on religion. Some people use it for good, some for bad. I enjoyed so many performances in the film mainly by Amurri and Culkin, respectively. While it isn't as funny and as out there as Kevin Smith's Dogma was so to speak it combines comedy film elements with its own which makes it a riot and a good time.Starring: Jena Malone, Mandy Moore, Macaulay Culkin, Patrick Fugit, Eva Amurri, Heather Matarazzo, Chad Faust, Elizabeth Thai, Martin Donovan, and Mary-Louise Parker. Directed by: Brian Danelly.