Left Behind: Rise Of The Antichrist is a decent follow-up to the 2014 Left Behind reboot film, though with an actual Christian actor (Kevin Sorbo) in the lead role of Rayford Steele and an entirely different cast. It takes place six months after the Rapture, when the world is worried that another set of disappearances will happen and Nicolae Carpathia slowly emerges as the coming one-world leader through the United Nations, whom Bible students prophesy would be the Antichrist.
It's a decent adaptation of the second half of the first Left Behind book, but the problem I have with it now is that Dr. Chaim Rosenzweig goes from being a botanist who creates a Miracle-Gro to solve the world's hunger problems in the books to being a computer programmer who creates a phone app for controlling monetary transactions. It feeds into the mentality of anti-Semites who believe that the Jews want to take over the world through finances and everything else.
Film A good film, though a bit anti-Semitic
Left Behind: Rise Of The Antichrist is a decent follow-up to the 2014 Left Behind reboot film, though with an actual Christian actor (Kevin Sorbo) in the lead role of Rayford Steele and an entirely different cast. It takes place six months after the Rapture, when the world is worried that another set of disappearances will happen and Nicolae Carpathia slowly emerges as the coming one-world leader through the United Nations, whom Bible students prophesy would be the Antichrist.
It's a decent adaptation of the second half of the first Left Behind book, but the problem I have with it now is that Dr. Chaim Rosenzweig goes from being a botanist who creates a Miracle-Gro to solve the world's hunger problems in the books to being a computer programmer who creates a phone app for controlling monetary transactions. It feeds into the mentality of anti-Semites who believe that the Jews want to take over the world through finances and everything else.