IMDb plot summary: A mother's faith stands against all odds and inspires her husband and children to hold onto theirs. Based on a remarkable true story.
Directed by Richard L. Ramsey and Joel David Smallbone. Stars Daisy Betts, Joel David Smallbone, and Kirrilee Berger.
Unsung Hero tells the true story of David and Helen Smallbone, who move from Australia to Nashville in an attempt to get David's music producing career back on track. They are met with an enormous amount of obstacles, and the "unsung hero" of the title is Helen, who holds the family together as David struggles with his career and the emotional toll this all takes on him. I have a pretty low expectation for faith-based films, but this one is not bad. It's definitely a little cheesy, but it does a pretty good job of having a decent baseline quality level. It's interesting to me that this is framed in marketing as the story of the artists of Rebecca St. James and the artists behind the band For King and Country, because that's barely part of the story -- For King and Country isn't even mentioned until the epilogue. It does feel very much like just a group of kids wanting to honor their parents by telling their stories. But that gets a little murky. I appreciate that it doesn't have an obviously didactic message the way that so many faith-based films do, but I wish that it was a little bit clearer in what it WAS trying to say, because where it does feel didactic, it feels unclearly so. It seems like trying to teach a message both about the need for humility and the need for ambition, and how somehow this husband is failing at both at once, and that doesn't quite work. I think it does a good job of building the relationship with the family. As somebody who grew up in a large family and not a lot of money, I really appreciate the thoughtfulness put into that. It's not a bad movie if you like this kind of story, or if you're at all curious about the families of some of the big CCM names, but for me it sits along the lines of other mid-level inspirational stories. A step up for a lot of Christian films, but still not something that I want to watch again.
How it entered my Flickchart:
🎥 Unsung Hero (2024)
📊 Ranked #2530/4184 on my Flickchart
🎯 Flickscore™: 40
lost to Cypher (held at #2101)
beat Le Cercle Rouge (#3146 → #3147)
beat The Man Who Knew Too Much (#2627 → #2628)
lost to The Blues Brothers (held at #2363)
lost to King Richard (held at #2495)
beat Dhamaal (#2561 → #2562)
lost to Rushmore (held at #2527)
beat The Vagabond King (#2545 → #2546)
beat The Hangover (#2535 → #2536)
beat Shame (#2531 → #2532)
lost to Stagecoach (held at #2529)
beat Elevator to the Gallows (#2530 → #2531)

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