The Rapture (film)
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The Rapture | |
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Theatrical release poster |
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Directed by | Michael Tolkin |
Produced by | Karen Koch Nancy Tenenbaum Nick Wechsler Laurie Parker (executive producer) |
Written by | Michael Tolkin |
Starring | Mimi Rogers Darwyn Carson |
Music by | Thomas Newman |
Cinematography | Bojan Bazelli |
Editing by | Suzanne Fenn |
Distributed by | New Line Cinema |
Release date(s) | September 6, 1991 |
Running time | 100 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
The Rapture is a 1991 psychological/religious drama film starring Mimi Rogers, David Duchovny, Darwyn Carson, Patrick Bauchau, Marvin Elkins, and Stephanie Menuez; directed by Michael Tolkin; rated R; 100 minutes long; and produced by New Line Cinema.
[edit] Plot summary
The film tells the story of Sharon, a young Los Angeles woman who engages in a swinging, libidinous lifestyle with her male partner. She comes into contact with a sect that advises her that a true Rapture is imminent. In time, she comes to accept this belief herself and becomes a born-again Christian. She begins a new, pious lifestyle, eventually marrying and having a daughter. When her husband is killed in a senseless murder, however, she begins to question the benevolence of God. She believes she must wait in the desert for the coming of the Rapture but eventually loses patience. At her daughter's urging, she decides to hasten her and her daughter's ascendance to heaven. She kills her daughter with a gunshot, but is unable to take her own life afterwards, afraid she'll be condemned as a suicide. She is arrested and imprisoned.
Until this point, the film appears to be a story about a born-again cultist whose beliefs eventually lead to murder, but, in a twist ending, the Rapture does indeed arrive, and the saved are taken to Heaven. Still, Sharon refuses to renounce her anger at God for his cruelty. Her young daughter begs her to accept God back into her heart so she can join her husband and daughter in Heaven, but Sharon declines, preferring to remain in a purgatory-like landscape for eternity.
[edit] External links
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