The Freedom of Silence (2011)

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The Freedom of Silence: Directed by Richard Robertson. With Tyler Messner, Tasha Clark, Chris Bylsma, Lauren Alfano. It’s the year 2030, and the government has outlawed Christianity. Enter Zach Thompson, a brave man who teams up with a friend to hack into the government’s computer system to reclaim religious freedom for Americans.

“Laughably bad acting, boring and ineffective editing, derpy canned soft-rock muzak, and an awkward all-white cast bring this ridiculous farce of a film to paranoid, whining life. The premise of this film is that Christianity has become outlawed in America, and the straggling hangers-on of poor, persecuted Christians are brutalized at every turn by the government. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe story is supposed to involve a Christian undergoing a sometimes violent interrogation wherein the evil atheist government seeks other Christians, but honestly the film is so dull that I kept falling asleep. Every time I woke up, it was the same thing: poorly scripted dialogues between characters void of personalities, the focus of which were purely u0026quot;Wah, waaah wah! Christians good, gubmint bad! Christians persecuted!u0026quot; The film has no real or accurate representation of non-Christians. It also doesnu0026#39;t have any non-whites in its lame storyline. But thatu0026#39;s okay, because it also doesnu0026#39;t have any action, interesting characters, or much of a point.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eI had to give up watching because nothing was happening and time should not be wasted on garbage.”

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