How long is the greater glory movie




















Epic tale about religious freedom gets very bloody. R minutes. Rate movie. Watch or buy. Based on 9 reviews. Based on 3 reviews. Get it now Searching for streaming and purchasing options Common Sense is a nonprofit organization. Your purchase helps us remain independent and ad-free. Get it now on Searching for streaming and purchasing options X of Y Official trailer. Did we miss something on diversity? Suggest an update For Greater Glory. Your privacy is important to us. We won't share this comment without your permission.

If you chose to provide an email address, it will only be used to contact you about your comment. See our privacy policy. A lot or a little? The parents' guide to what's in this movie. Positive Messages.

Positive Role Models. Very infrequent use of "hell. What parents need to know Parents need to know that For Greater Glory , which sheds light on one of the bloodiest moments in Mexican history, doesn't shy away from depicting war-related carnage: Children and the elderly are beaten and shot point blank; countless others are seen with nooses tied around their necks and then hung from ceilings and telegraph lines, with their corpses shown motionless for many scenes.

Continue reading Show less. Stay up to date on new reviews. Get full reviews, ratings, and advice delivered weekly to your inbox. User Reviews Parents say Kids say. Adult Written by Hildegard April 2, Padre Christopher is also a saint. The story is very inspiring, but it is also very violent.

The war violence itself is mo Continue reading. Report this review. Great Movie about Religious Freedom! Teen, 15 years old Written by CatholicTeen May 11, Powerful Message! This is a must see movie for kids and adults who believe in the power of spirit.

An atheist and a hero of the revolution, Gorostieta signed on for the cash and because he supported the principle of religious freedom. In the context of a new English-language epic called "For Greater Glory," that principle apparently applies only to Catholics. No other religion is ever mentioned. The war took heavy casualties on both sides, and the United States played a behind-the-scenes role in protecting the interests of U.

This war has all the elements to make it well-known, but I confess I'd never heard of it. A close Mexican-American friend, well-informed in Mexican history, told me she never has, either. Is it in the usual history books? You'll learn a lot about it in "For Greater Glory," the most expensive film ever made in Mexico, an ambitious production with a cast filled with stars.

It is well-made, yes, but has such pro-Catholic tunnel vision I began to question its view of events. One important subplot involves a year-old boy choosing to die for his faith. Of course the federal troops who shot him were monsters, but the film seems to approve of his decision and includes him approvingly in a long list of Cristeros who have achieved sainthood or beatification after their deaths in the war.

The central figure is Gorostieta, played by Andy Garcia with impressive strength and presence. He values his own leadership expertise, defends the fact that he is serving because of the money, and indeed is a brilliant general. There's an effective sequence where he warns a jealous Cristeros leader he is probably leading his men into an ambush.

The man won't listen. Gorostieta lets him go, and then leads his own troops up behind the ambushing federales, who are exactly where he predicted they would be. President Calles Ruben Blades , who can't believe the Cristeros can possibly be successful, pursues the war beyond what seems to be all common sense. It's one thing to enforce legal restraints on the Catholic Church and another — a riskier one — to order such extremes as sending all the bishops and foreign-born clergy out of the country and authorizing the murder of priests in their own churches.

In an early sequence, Peter O'Toole plays a year-old priest killed by the federales, and it is Jose, the altar boy who sees him die, who later becomes the martyr. When the priest is later killed by a firing squad, the boy joins the revolution and is mentored by Gorostieta, who treats him like the son he never had. Despite its profusion of violent battle sequences, the film is most effective in its quieter moments, such as the scenes in which Calles warily negotiates with the American ambassador Bruce Greenwood who is mainly intent on preserving U.

Another standout is the subtly tension-filled encounter between Gorostieta and Calles during a brief lull in the war. Particularly egregious are the emotional debates between Gorostieta and his wife Eva Longoria, in a stark departure from Desperate Housewives over his decision to once again suit up for battle. Making his directorial debut, esteemed special-effects designer Dean Wright Titanic, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King displays little sense of dramatic pacing, letting far too many scenes drag on endlessly.

The complicated storyline, with its numerous subplots and supporting characters who pop in and out of the action, is often difficult to follow.



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