Church Takes Its Message Ringside In The New Docu Trailer For FIGHT CHURCH
Generally, if you’ve gone to church enough times in your life, you often get to observe the topic of the internal and external struggles in the world among circles of faith, in some capacity. Well, times have changed, and some churches and their followers have chosen to expand their discourse through mixed martial arts training and competition, combining both disciplines in the name of their religious and spiritual identities.
Christianity and mixed martial arts probably seem like strange bedfellows at best and diametrical opposites at worst. But an estimated 700 so-called “fight ministries” have popped up across the U.S. in recent years, indicating a growing overlap between the two practices. While this could simply be another signifier of MMA’s growing place in mainstream culture, reconciling what many consider to be brutal and barbaric violence with the Gospel of turning the other cheek doesn’t seem to compute. After all, how do you love your neighbour when you’re kneeing him in the face?
Following four preaching fighters, FIGHT CHURCH paints a surprisingly human portrait of men struggling to reconcile their religious beliefs with their sport of choice. There’s the aging fighter who returned to the church after a misspent and violent youth, the young associate pastor who took up fighting so he could protect his pretty young wife, the ex-pro who sees MMA as a haven for lost souls, and the hotshot with a chance at going pro, who sees himself as a Christian first and a fighter second. For them, training to beat others to a bloody pulp is an extension of worship. But to others, like Father John Duffell, mixed martial arts are an expression of violent hate, completely irreconcilable with the word of God.
For a film tackling such controversial subject matter, FIGHT CHURCH is refreshingly objective and even-handed. Directors Daniel Junge (Academy Award-winner SAVING FACE) and Bryan Storkle (HOLY ROLLERS: THE TRUE STORY OF CARD COUNTING CHRISTIANS), do an impressive job of withholding judgment. Instead they take a more fly-on-the-wall approach, letting the subjects dig their own graves, such as when one participant claims that all of society’s woes can be attributed to the “feminization” of men while showing his young sons how to shoot handguns. Yet, through all the chest kicks and choke holds we never lose sight of the fighters’ humanity, giving the film relevance beyond religious freak show or testosterone-filled fury. By turns shocking, touching, and even inspirational, FIGHT CHURCH is unlike any sports documentary you’ve ever seen. And remember, “Jesus didn’t tap out.”
Lionsgate VOD is hosting the latest trailer for the film on its channel, so stay tuned for further release info.
Native New Yorker. Lover of all things pizza, chocolate, pets, and good friends. Karaoke hero. Left of center. Survivor. Fond supporter of cult, obscure and independent cinema - especially fond of Asian movies and global action cinema. Author of the bi-weekly Hit List. Founder and editor of Film Combat Syndicate. Still, very much, only human.
August 9, 2014 @ 10:16 pm
Many are saying we are in the end times…after seeing the progress and satanic doctrine of Jesus Didn't Tap.
We are not in the end times!
end time era will be worst than this. Because false preachers will include worldly desires into the church. Christianity will be the lowest of low and Islam will rise to the top!
Everything will be accepted in church: gay marriage, abortion, lesbian, fighting, drugs, murder, adultery etc
August 9, 2014 @ 11:18 pm
LOLwut? O_o