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Story saves otherwise pedestrian ‘All Saints’

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COURTESY SONY PICTURES

Nelson Lee, left, and John Corbett plan to plant crops at their church in “All Saints.”

“ALL SAINTS”

**

(PG, 1:48)

The line between fiction and nonfiction is deliberately blurred in “All Saints,” which tells the true story of a Tennessee church resurrected by unlikely saviors. The film, written by Steve Armour and directed by Steve Gomer, was shot on location at the real All Saints Church in Smyrna, Tenn., and many members of the church play themselves.

John Corbett puts his folksy charm to the role of the Rev. Michael Spurlock, who is tasked with putting a dying church out of its misery, its mortgage astronomical and membership dwindling. It’s on course to become a big-box store, but with a vision from God and a few dozen Burmese immigrants, Michael revives the institution.

Nelson Lee plays Ye Win, an ethnically Karen man from Burma, a refugee from brutal civil war, who has just arrived with a group of families in the United States. Lacking support and resources, he turns up at All Saints church. When the needy Karen land on his doorstep, the rebellious Michael decides that God has instructed him to plant a farm on the church land to feed the Karen people and pay the church’s mortgage.

“All Saints” is not so much about Scripture as it is about community: The people who need community the most cling to the church not necessarily for the prayers, but for the people. Though there are a few well-placed Bible verses, this story is about the purpose that a church serves to bring different kinds of people together and offer common goals, salvation and collective endeavors.

The cinematic execution is serviceable at best. It’s stilted and awkward at times, with too much dead air hanging around, and often the stakes and roller coaster of ups and downs in the script seem out of step with the emotion on screen. Visually, it’s nothing to write home about, but boundary-pushing cinema is not the goal here.

Corbett is impassioned as Michael, even when his shaggy-dog sensibility doesn’t quite fit this part. Lee gives the best performance in the film as the stoic and striving Ye Win, searching not even for the American dream, but simply a place to call home. He bonds with cranky Vietnam vet Forrest (Barry Corbin) through their shared war experiences and offers Forrest the thing he needed the most: a friend.

“All Saints” targets its faithful audience with a tale of Christian community that includes people of all races, nationalities, cultures and creeds coming together in service to each other. It’s a sweet story, even if the storytelling falters and aesthetic packaging leaves something to be desired.

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