Covenant News at www.covchurch.org
CULVER CITY, CA (December 3, 2002) - The Jack Hafer-produced World War II movie
To End All Wars has already won awards from film festivals and the
Veterans of Foreign Wars.
However, the critical acclaim from one man was reward enough.
Hafer had hoped that To End All Wars would present an accurate
account of the story written by British soldier Ernest Gordon, Through
the Valley of the Kwai, which described Gordon's imprisonment in a
Burma Prisoner of War (POW) camp after being captured by Japanese soldiers.
Gordon, who was Dean of the Chapel at Princeton University in New Jersey
for 26 years, viewed the 117-minute R-rated film about a year ago. His
reaction at the end of screening was short and sweet: "Jack, you've
captured the heart of it."
Beginning Friday and continuing through December 12, To End All Wars
will be shown at Arclight Cinemas in Hollywood, California, as part of an
exclusive engagement. Hafer, who lives in southern California and attended
Rolling Hills Covenant Church in Rolling Hills Estates for a time, hopes
his film can affect others in a manner similar to the way Gordon's story
has had an impact on his own life.
"This film was made for the filmgoer who appreciates important films, but
who may not have thought about life from this viewpoint," Hafer said. "When
I'd originally read the book on which the film was based, it greatly
impacted my life - which is why I wanted to tell this story.
"It is more than just a story of forgiveness," continued Hafer, who has
been in the film business since 1987. "It includes forgiveness, but it also
challenges our own selfish lifestyles, the reason we're living, what keeps
us going each day when life isn't working, how we can rise above our
circumstances. The making of the film affected my spiritual life very
strongly."
To End All Wars is based in Burma and documents a timeframe during
which
captured Allied soldiers in World War II were forced to build a railroad
through a vast jungle while being badly mistreated. This endeavor was in
part the basis of David Lean's Oscar-winning 1957 film Bridge Over the
River Kwai, although Hafer and company approach the events quite
differently.
In Hafer's film, Gordon and others decide to try to better their lives
during their harrowing experience as prisoners of war, starting a "colleg
e of liberal arts" and a "church without walls" as ways to uplift the
spirits of the camp. In the process, they overcome bitterness with
forgiveness and overcome unlivable conditions with an indomitable inner
strength.
There is no mention of Jesus Christ in the movie, said Hafer, who heads up
Gummshoe Productions, an independent company in Manhattan Beach, after
serving as vice president and general manager of GMT Studios in nearby
Culver City. However, said one Covenant pastor at a screening last spring,
"the story of how Gordon and others transform their world is Christ like."
The pastor called it a "best film to take an unbelieving friend to."
To End All Wars was an act of faith, according to Hafer. It was
difficult for Hafer and his independent film group to secure the funds to
pay crewmembers and actors (a cast that included Kiefer Sutherland).
However, the bills got paid and Hafer was able to witness the reunion of
Gordon and a soldier at one of the Japanese POW camps.
Gordon died this past January, but his story lives on in a film that movie
critic Michael Medved describes as "a project that courageously refuses to
trivialize the events it portrays with phony lyricism or cheap, reassuring
uplift." Hafer knows it was just the way Gordon would have wanted it, which
is good enough for him.
"The message of this film has made all of the hard work worth it," he said.
For more information about the film and about Hafer and others involved
in the production, visit the movie website at www.toendallwars.com. For
more information about the upcoming showing in Hollywood, call
323-464-1478.
WWII Movie's Message: Forgiveness Overcomes Bitterness
By Craig Pinley
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