GREAT INVESTMENT
Created: 12/11/07
I must admit that before seeing the new film Amazing Grace, I knew almost nothing about William Wilberforce. I suspect that is true of many people—but I hope that will change as a result of this depiction of his part in the long struggle to end the slave trade in the British colonies in the late 1700s and early 1800s. It's a remarkable and inspiring tale.
The film draws its title from the great hymn written by John Newton, a former slave-ship captain who became an evangelical pastor after a dramatic conversion experience. Newton was instrumental in Wilberforce's own spiritual journey, as Newton was one of many people who encouraged Wilberforce to remain in politics when, in his early 20s and newly elected to parliament, Wilberforce experienced a profound spiritual awakening and resolved to dedicate his life to God. Newton, among others (including Wilberforce's school friend, William Pitt, who was to became Britain's youngest prime minister at the age of 24), helped him to see that his talent for politics might be part of God's call, rather than a distraction from it.
One of the many things this film gets right is its depiction of that struggle. That Wilberforce was a person of faith is evident in every frame, yet his faith is woven into a complete picture of the man. This is one of the better movie examples I've seen of what a struggle to live out one's faith looks like. And the film makes plain why Wilberforce would assume that politics and a life of devotion might be mutually exclusive—the world of politics is scrappy and frustrating and filled with moral compromise. Some of the scenes of debate in the House of Commons are positively scary. The viewer comes away with a surprisingly clear sense of how an idea that now seems so obviously right—ending the brutal slave trade—was so unthinkable at the time that it took two decades to pass a bill accomplishing it, despite the overwhelming evidence that Wilberforce and his collaborator amassed against the trade.
The familiar hymn proves a wonderful backdrop for the story. "Amazing grace, how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me! I once was lost, but now am found; was blind, but now I see." The words express the power of Wilberforce's own conversion experience (and Newton's); they also express the necessity of grace in overcoming human blindness writ large. As the story of the fight for abolition unfolds, one gains a sense that social change, particularly on this scale, does not happen without a huge measure of grace. Vast injustices like the conditions on the slave ships, described here in heartbreaking detail, simply could not stand were it not for monumental blindness—usually fueled, as it is here, by greed and fear. And the human beings who take on the task of reform are themselves flawed and plagued by their own failures of vision: When to compromise? When to voice righteous indignation? When to push and when to hold back? When to give up? Where to find the will to continue fighting a just cause that seems to be proving impossible? One wonders how change ever happens, and yet somehow it does. This film depicts a wonderful example of how grace brings about good and necessary shifts in the balance of power, working through flawed human vessels.
THIS IS A MUST BUY
OVERALL
9/10
22 of 23 people found this review helpful.

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Very Good, but not completely historically accurate...
Created: 11/03/08
For the record, I really enjoyed the film "Amazing Grace"; as others have said, it is an inspiring and emotionally moving story. One of the only dispute that I have with this film is the outlandish conception of John Newton that is given through watching his character unfold. Because the movie has the backdrop of the song by John Newton, and also has a running tie between William Wilberforce's fight against Slavery and his friendship with John Newton, I think the person of John Newton should have been a better/closer portrayal of the actual man, John Newton. The movie made him out to be a monkish, crazy, loud, man. However, John Newton was a married man who was a faithful preacher/pastor; he was very active in his community and church, and while he was a former slave-shipman, the Lord redeemed him from a life of sin and guilt, and gave him a life of love and light so as to have the ability to write such truths as, "I once was lost, but now am found," and "Through many dangers, toils and snares, I have already come; 'Tis Grace hath brought me safe, thus far, and Grace will lead me Home." What the film failed in providing the audience was an accurate picture of John Newton as he was a man of Hope and Courage in the Lord.
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REQUIRED VIEWING
Created: 12/02/10
THIS HISTORICAL DRAMA FOLLOWS THE 15 YEARS THAT WILLIAM WILBERFORCE FOUGHT TO HAVE THE SLAVE TRADE ABOLISHED IN ENGLAND. HIS INSPIRATION WAS THE PREACHER OF HIS YOUTH, JOHN NEWTON WHO WROTE AMAZING GRACE. IN HIS YOUNGER YEARS, NEWTON HAD BEEN A SLAVE SHIP CAPTAIN. FINALLY HE REALIZED THE INHUMANITY OF WHAT HE WAS DOING AND LEFT THE SEA BECOME A MINISTER. FOR THE REMAINDER OF HIS LIFE HE WAS HAUNTED BY THE 20000 SOULS HE TRANSPORTED FROM AFRICA TO THE COLONIES OF THE NEW WORLD. THE FILM IS EXCEPTIONAL IN EVERY WAY. IT IS SUPERBLY CAST, BEAUTIFULLY FILMED CONTRASTING WITH THE DESCRIPTIONS OF HORROR THE SLAVES ENDURED ON THE SHIPS TO END UP IN WRETCHED SLAVERY. AMAZING GRACE SHOULD BE ON EVERYONES LIST AS A MUST SEE.

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DVD Amazing Grace
Created: 17/03/10
Based on actual events, this historical drama from acclaimed director Michael Apted tells the story of William Wilberforce, an 18th-century English politician who fought for the abolition of slavery. Despite staunch opposition, Wilberforce waged an aggressive campaign using boycotts, petitions and slogans to bring the British slave trade to a decisive end.
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Amazing Grace
Created: 09/04/08
I bought the DVD after seeing the movie in theatres & then at someone's movie night gathering. It's a powerful story of the life of William Willberforce, a very young man when he became the voice against slavery in England. Inspiring, heart wrenching at times, and threading it all into one piece is the story behind one of the most beloved hymns of all time, "Amazing Grace" and its author John Newton (Albert Finney). Proof once again that Hollywood doesn't need to continue to churn out trash to entertain audiences.
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