Salvation!

Salvation! (also known as Salvation!: Have You Said Your Prayers Today?) is a 1987 American black comedy film directed by Beth B, and starring Viggo Mortensen, Exene Cervenka, and Stephen McHattie. The film is a parody of televangelism, and was released right after the real-life Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart scandals.[1]

Salvation!
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBeth B
Produced byBeth B
Michael H. Shamberg
Screenplay byBeth B
Tom Robinson
StarringStephen McHattie
Dominique Davalos
Exene Cervenka
Viggo Mortensen
Rockets Redglare
Music byNew Order
CinematographyFrancis Kenny
Edited byElizabeth Kling
Distributed byCircle Films
Release date
  • May 31, 1987 (1987-05-31) (New York City)
Running time
80 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The film was released on VHS, but not as yet on DVD.

Plot

McHattie plays Reverend Randall, a Staten Island-based televangelist who has been bilking his flock and secretly watches pornography while he is rehearsing his sermons in his stately home. Cervenka plays Rhonda Stample, a born again Christian who watches his programs and regularly sends him money, to the irritation of Rhonda's non-believer husband, Jerome (Viggo Mortensen). Shortly after Jerome loses his factory job, his sister in-law Lenore (Dominique Davalos) comes to Rev. Randall's home in a rainstorm, claiming car trouble. He reluctantly lets her in, and the two take turns seducing and then retreating from each other, until they finally engage in violent lovemaking. Jerome shows up later that evening, along with two boorish neighbors, and beat him for what they believe is an unwanted encounter with Lenore. All of them contemplate the possibilities of blackmail against him with a sex scandal, but Randall manages to escape his home. That morning, he is picked up hitchhiking by Rhonda, who pitches him on the notion of bringing her into his ministry. In order to avert the intentions of her husband and sister, he agrees to her idea. Later, Rhonda's addition to Randall's program has become a huge success, with Jerome, Lenore, and the neighbors all enjoying a higher standard of living. But Rhonda gets drunk with power, and makes increasing demands on Randall, first to boot all the other parties from their ministry, and then for a bigger share of their proceeds. Randall resists the latter option, but ultimately gives in. The film finishes with Rhonda performing a heavy-metal inspired song of faith, "Destroy All Evil", with imagery associated with tropes of the musical style.

Soundtrack

The soundtrack album was released on Factory Benelux/Les Disques du Crépuscule (catalogue TWI-774)[2] and Factory Australasia (catalogue FACT-182)[3] in February 1988.

Track listing

Salvation! (Original Soundtrack)
Soundtrack album by
various artists
Released1988
Genre
Label
ProducerVarious
Singles from Salvation! (Original Soundtrack)
  1. "Salvation!"/"You Can't Blackmail Jesus"
    Released: October 1987
  2. "Touched by the Hand of God"
    Released: 7 December 1987

Side A:

  1. New Order: "Salvation Theme" - 2:14
  2. Jumpin' Jesus (Arthur Baker and Stuart Kimball, vocals by Stephen McHattie): "You Can't Blackmail Jesus" - 4:26
  3. Cabaret Voltaire: "Twanky Party" - 4:17
  4. New Order: "Touched by the Hand of God" - 5:02
  5. Dominique* (Dominique Davalos): "Play The Beat" - 3:24
  6. The Hood: "Nightmare" - 1:54

Side B:

  1. New Order: "Let's Go" - 3:44
  2. The Hood: "Salvation! Have You Said Your Prayers Today" - 4:10
  3. Arthur Baker: "Come On" - 2:45
  4. New Order: "Sputnik" - 2:31
  5. Cabaret Voltaire: "Jesus Saves" - 4:02
  6. New Order: "Skullcrusher" - 2:52
  7. Dominique*: "Destroy All Evil" - 3:33

CD editions include the 12" remix of "Touched by the Hand of God".[4][5]

The soundtrack spawned two singles, a double A-side of The Hood's "Salvation!" and Jumpin' Jesus' "You Can't Blackmail Jesus",[3] and New Order's "Touched by the Hand of God".[6] In addition, actress Dominique Davalos issued a 12" single in 1988 via Les Disques du Crepuscule entitled "This Is Her Life" with "Play The Beat" from the Salvation film as its b-side [7]

gollark: I'm not. I simply choose to not use C, so I do not have to deal with this.
gollark: ... yes, I know the preprocessor isn't designed for that, this is part of why I dislike it?
gollark: So you can write macros which... actually do moderately complex syntax things?
gollark: It doesn't give you an actual parse tree.
gollark: The preprocessor is literally just token substitution, and not even consistent with the actual C tokenizer!

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.