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Tagline :
The story has been told in Christian
circles for 50 years. In 1956, five missionaries were brutally
murdered in the Ecuadorian jungle by members of the Waodani
tribe they went to serve. And then something amazing happened;
the killers became Christians.
 Louie Leonardo as
Mincayani
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The martyr's names—Nate Saint, Jim Elliot,
Pete Fleming, Ed McCully, and Roger Youderian—and their
sacrifice galvanized a whole generation of missionaries who
headed to foreign fields with the slain Elliot's words on
their lips, "He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to
gain what he cannot lose." Now, a group of businessmen turned
filmmakers is hoping the story will create a dialog between
Christians and non-believers here at home.
End of the Spear
features the events of 1956 from the perspectives of the
Waodani tribe leader, Mincayani, a quasi-fictional figure
played by Louie Lenardo, and Nate Saint's son, Steve, played
as a boy by Chase Ellison and as an adult by Chad Allen.
Mincayani is a "composite character" primarily based on the
real character Mincaye, who was one of the men who killed the
missionaries. Shot in Panama using members of the Embera tribe
for all but a few key roles, the movie is a stirring, lush
production that elevates the visual storytelling portfolio of
independent Christian movies.
 Chad Allen played dual roles
of Nate and Steve Saint
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The story reaches back into Mincayani's
childhood to show the violence that shaped his culture and
mindset. He was probably around 20 years old when he first saw
the yellow "woodbee" that was Nate Saint's small airplane
buzzing above the trees. After a series of tentative contacts
involving a bucket lowered from the plane by a long rope,
Saint and his fellow missionaries decided to land and meet the
natives face to face.
In their enthusiasm for reaching out to the
Waodani people, the missionaries, especially Elliot, are
depicted a bit like frat boys—goofy, exuberant, optimistic. On
the beach that would become their graveyard, the men trade
quips about their evangelistic efforts and ham it up for the
camera that Saint was using to document their encounter. The
result is a refreshing take on these men who've become like
protestant saints but were, in reality, just young men
embarking on a big adventure, albeit a holy one.
 Waodani warriors on the
hunt
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The interaction between the Waodani and the
missionaries on the beach offers a few laugh-out-loud moments
born out of awkward communication, but it inevitably grows
grim. End of the Spear includes a
recent revelation about what motivated the Waodani people to
spear the missionaries—a lie told to cover an illicit
romance—and doesn't turn its eyes from the resulting
violence.
During the killings, Mincayani seems
remorseful for reasons that aren't clear until much later in
the movie. In fact, the movie's main weakness is the way it
leaves holes in the audience's understanding of some of the
characters' motivations. For example, we don't learn the
reasoning behind the Waodani's murderous habits until late in
the movie. And something as basic as who's related to whom
within the Waodani tribe is sometimes confusing. It's likely
that some of these holes in the narrative are the result of
the many revisions the script went through.
But, some of the holes are by design.
 Chase Ellison as the young Steve
Saint, seeing his father off
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If moviegoers leave the theater asking
questions, so much the better as far as producer Mart
Green is concerned. His company, Every Tribe
Entertainment, also recently produced a companion documentary
about the events of 1956, Beyond
the Gates of Splendor, which has been circulating among
churches. The hope is that the believer who's seen the
documentary will be able to bring the non-believer, fresh from
the multiplex, "deeper into the truth of the story."
And the truth of the story is this: God had a
Son who was speared so that we all might know forgiveness.
Mincayani and the Waodani learned this when Nate Saint's
sister Rachel, along with two of the widows and their
children, moved into the Waodani village in the wake of their
loved ones' deaths. It was through their witness that much of
the tribe converted to Christianity. And it's through the
harrowing experience of two men as told in End of the Spear—Steve Saint and Mincaye,
now as close as father and son—that moviegoers can learn the
power of forgiveness and reconciliation. |