The film lives and breathes through and Sterling K. Brown .
Whether you grew up in the pews or have never stepped foot in a megachurch, the themes of are universal.
Writer-director Adamma Ebo doesn't lean into cartoonish parody. Instead, the film mimics the actual aesthetics of megachurch culture: the massive empty sanctuaries, the obsession with luxury brands (the Prada scene is iconic), and the linguistic gymnastics used to bypass accountability. It captures the specific "church politics" of the Black church experience with both love and a very sharp scalpel. 3. The Genre Blur Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul. (2022)
as Lee-Curtis Childs is a masterclass in performative charisma. He plays a man desperate to reclaim his throne, masking deep insecurities and moral failings with expensive suits and "blessed" rhetoric.
What starts as a mockumentary (complete with awkward camera glances a la The Office ) slowly morphs into a bleak character study. When the cameras "stop rolling," the aspect ratio shifts, and we see the raw, ugly tension between the couple. It’s in these moments that the film asks its biggest question: 4. The "Honk" and the Humiliation The film lives and breathes through and Sterling K
The climax of the film—the roadside demonstration—is one of the most cringe-inducing sequences in recent cinema. It represents the total collapse of dignity. Watching these two powerful figures reduced to begging for honks from passing cars is a visceral metaphor for how far they’ve fallen, and how delusional they remain. The Verdict
Here’s a breakdown of why this film sticks with you long after the credits roll: 1. The Performance Powerhouse and how delusional they remain.
(2022) is a fascinating, uncomfortable, and bitingly sharp look at the intersection of faith, ego, and the "business" of salvation. If you haven't seen it, it’s a satirical mockumentary that feels less like a spoof and more like a forensic autopsy of a megachurch scandal.