4.8 /10 1 Votes4.8
1.5/4 Roger Ebert Initial release 14 October 2016 Box office 1.5 million USD | 5.8/10 IMDb Directed by Ben Smallbone Director Ben Smallbone Language English | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Produced by Steve BarnettDavid SmallboneLuke SmallboneCubbie FinkGarrett Rutherford Screenplay by Chris DowlingTyler Poelle Story by Chris DowlingTyler PoelleJoel SmallboneLuke Smallbone Starring Joel SmallboneBianca SantosAmber MidthunderJim ParrackDavid Koechner Music by For King & CountryI Was the Lion Cast Similar Rules Don't Apply, Bleed for This, Queen of Katwe, Max Steel, The Accountant Profiles |
Priceless official trailer 1 2016 jim parrack movie
Priceless (known also as Priceless: She's Worth Fighting For) is a 2016 American romantic drama film about human trafficking, inspired by true events. It is directed by Ben Smallbone and produced by Steve Barnett with a screenplay by Chris Dowling and Tyler Poelle. Starring singer Joel Smallbone, Bianca Santos, Amber Midthunder, Jim Parrack, and David Koechner, it tells the story of a man who has his life changed when meets two girls, which falls in love with one and starts to protect them from evil forces in the country with bad purposes.
Contents
- Priceless official trailer 1 2016 jim parrack movie
- Plot summary
- Cast
- Production
- Release
- Box office
- Critical reception
- Accompanying media
- References
The film is being distributed by Roadside Attractions and it was released on October 14, 2016 to generally positive reviews from critics and audience.
Plot summary
The story is inspired by true events. The main character, James Stevens, after losing his wife and daughter, is unable to hold a steady job and agrees to drive a box truck across the country with no questions asked, then discovers that he is actually "delivering" two girls as part of a human trafficking ring. Stevens then must decide what to do and how to fight to shut down a trafficking ring.
Cast
Production
The film was announced in 2015. It was inspired by director Ben Smallbone's work on a documentary that followed a former pimp who rescued people from human trafficking, and by the band For King & Country's emphasis on respecting women. Joel Smallbone said, "Part of the DNA of For King & Country is this idea of respect and honor in relationships and women being priceless. What we've found in our beliefs as men is that people are made equal. The film continues the idea that no one is a commodity and everyone deserves to be loved and loved well."
It was filmed in Albuquerque, New Mexico, beginning in August 2015. Joel Smallbone, who is originally from Australia, worked with dialect coach Steve Corona to "play a bloke from Houston".
Roadside Attractions acquired the distribution rights to the film in August 2016. Roadside Attractions co-president Howard Cohen said, "'Priceless’ is a film that will push those emotional buttons which can engage and transform."
The film was made with four members of the Smallbone family: brothers Joel, Luke, and Ben Smallbone, and their father, David Smallbone.
Release
The film debuted in a limited release in 303 theaters on October 14, 2016.
It is rated PG-13 by the MPAA for "mature thematic material involving human trafficking, and some violence."
Box office
The film grossed $703,200 in its opening weekend, with an average of $2,321 per theater.
Critical reception
The film has received generally positive reviews from audience and of some critics; Joe Leydon of Variety magazine gave the film a positive review, calling it "surprisingly involving" and "slickly produced". He wrote, "director Ben Smallbone (brother of the movie’s lead player) is adept at generating suspense, particularly during a scene in which James attempts a phone conversation with his daughter while bad guys lurk outside his motel room, and manages to persuasively convey the seediness, desperation, and danger that define the demimonde that Garo rules with a whim of iron. To put it another way: Priceless achieves greater impact through understatement and implication than many other similarly plotted movies do with R-rated explicitness."
Susan Wloszczyna of RogerEbert.com was negative about the film, criticizing it as "cheap and generic." She wrote, "The main intention behind 'Priceless,' besides allowing For King & Country to become involved in the movie business, seems to be a genuine desire to raise awareness of the horrors of the crime of trafficking, not that this PG-13 drama shows anything too graphic. But, on a purely entertainment level, all I know is when the end credits started rolling, I said to myself, 'Thank, God.'"
Kimber Myers of the Los Angeles Times was more positive, characterizing it as a "lean drama that relies more on emotion than well-crafted dialogue or character development" and saying, "Though its obvious message may not translate well outside its intended audience, the converted will likely be entertained by the well-produced package the moving themes are delivered in."
Accompanying media
For King and Country recorded Priceless, a song which serves on the film's soundtrack. It was released as a single, and has reached #4 on the Hot Christian Songs chart.
The film was adapted into a novel, titled Priceless: She's Worth Fighting For, which was released on September 6, 2016.