Daily Broadside | Sleeper Hit “Sound of Freedom” Makes Its Money Back While Championing A Cause Hollywood Ignores

Happy Monday. Hope you had a good weekend.

My wife and I went with another couple to see Sound of Freedom, the movie starring Jim Caviezel (The Passion of the Christ) that outperformed Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny in it’s opening day sales.

Elsewhere, and in nearly 2,000 fewer theaters than Dial of Dud (2,850 compared to 4,600), Sound of Freedom, AKA the Little Christian-Themed Indie That Disney Dumped, hauled in another $15.2 million. By Monday, this $14.5 million budgeted movie — THAT DISNEY DUMPED – will have grossed close to $40 million.

Sound of Freedom — THE MOVIE DISNEY DUMPED – came in number three at the box office and – UNLIKE DISNEY’S DIAL OF DUD — is already making millions in profit. In its second weekend, Sound of Freedom trounced the opening weekend of Joy Ride, a woke comedy—he wrote as though “woke comedy” is not an oxymoron—that belly-flopped in 2,850 theaters with just $6 million.

How’s that for justice? Disney acquired 20th Century-Fox in 2019 and immediately shelves Sound of Freedom, which wrapped in 2018. Why would Disney shelve a $14.5 million Christian-themed film when Christian-themed films make money? Easy answer: it’s a Christian movie. Also, Sound of Freedom sounds an alarm about child exploitation, and as we now know, Disney is pro-child exploitation.

I’d call the film a “docudrama” because it is based on a true story but it is more drama than thriller, and there’s no doubt that Sound of Freedom is a compelling movie. It’s based on the true story of Tim Ballard (Caviezel), a U.S. Homeland Investigations agent hunting pedophiles who quits his job in order to rescue children from global sex traffickers.

As a visual experience, the cinematography is excellent. The acting throughout is believable, and of particular note is the performance of Bill Camp (12 Years a Slave; Joker) who plays Vampiro, a former cartel boss trying to expunge the evil he has himself engaged in by rescuing trafficked children.

POSSIBLE SPOILER AHEAD

The story is provocative and gripping (although a bit choppy in the beginning), even though it depicts nothing explicit. The violence and cruelty are all implied, allowing it to keep its PG-13 rating (language, smoking, drug and sexual references). Even a scene of hand-to-hand combat that ends with the death of a trafficker is mostly done in the shadows and we’re only shown his lifeless legs.

That reticence to more fully depict violence leads me to my only real complaint about the film: it feels “flat” because there’s no real emotional rhthym of build and release. Caviezel shows plenty of tears, but his character portrayal comes across as a strictly one note grim, with only one notable moment of humor to break the monotony.

The subject matter is sobering and tough to watch, but the gut-wrenching agony of losing a child and the terror of what they have been through would seem to elicit more grief from the parents and the children. The prospect of being reunited with a child thought to be lost would also seem to generate overwhelming emotion, but it remains very reserved throughout.

END POSSIBLE SPOILER

None of that is to dissuade you from seeing the film; far from it. Not only does it tackle a topic that Hollywood largely avoids, it has the noble purpose of trying to raise awareness of a global business that does $150 billion in transactions annually. This despite the film being completed in 2018 and then being shelved by Disney. Freedom only gained its freedom after a crowd-funding effort.

That’s too bad because there’s obviously an audience for it. While some film critics have been unnecessarily harsh in their reviews (looking at you, Rolling Stone), at least one recognized that one doesn’t have to be a Christian to appreciate what the film tries to accomplish.

In a largely positive review, Variety‘s Owen Gleiberman wrote, “Let’s assume that, like me, you’re not a right-wing fundamentalist conspiracy theorist looking for a dark, faith-based suspense film to see over the holiday weekend. (The movie opens July 3.) Even then, you needn’t hold extreme beliefs to experience ‘Sound of Freedom’ as a compelling movie that shines an authentic light on one of the crucial criminal horrors of our time, one that Hollywood has mostly shied away from.” Other critics seemed to agree, giving “Sound of Freedom” an impressive 92% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Go see it. And take someone with you.