An extraordinary find in a train stationâs secondhand bookshop, George MacDonaldâs Phantastes, changed C.S. Lewisâs lifeâand 20th-century literatureâforever. While reading it âmy imagination was baptized,â says writer and star Max McLean as Lewis. âThe rest of me,â he
adds with a grimace, âtook a little longer.â The Most Reluctant Convert: The Untold Story of C.S. Lewis is extraordinary in its own ways.
Based on McLeanâs one-man play of the same name, the film relates Lewisâs journey from teenage atheist to one of the great thinkers and apologists of the last century. Most of the words are Lewisâs own, taken from his various works. The beauty of Lewisâ writing is that while the thoughts are complex the style is conversational.
Thanks to McLeanâs studied performance, we feel as though itâs the man himself speaking directly to us over beers in the pub or out for a leisurely stroll. Between his monologues various actors portray Lewis in his youth (most notably Nicholas Ralph, known for his role on All Creatures Great and Small) as McLeanâs Lewis looks on, like Scrooge revisiting Christmases past. Far from being a documentary or recorded stage performance, the film is not a traditional biopic or drama either. Itâs an intimate experience with an elder statesman of the faith.
Always an intellectual, with a very dark side only hinted at here, Lewisâ conversion was tortured and considered. But the film moves with nothing but grace. Itâs beautifully shot, with a luxurious quality of production. At a very lean 73 minutes it is dense but never dull. I was engaged the whole time.
For the postmodern, Lewisâ logical arguments as presented in works like Mere Christianity wonât have emotional resonance. Itâs unfortunate, because as appealing as his fiction is, the nonfiction is where his intellect shines. What the filmmakers have done here is dramatize the reasoning that brought Lewis to undeniable truth and closer to joy, in ways similar to how the Romantic poets also swayed Lewisâ thoughts and feelings.
A friendâs teenage daughter summed up the lesson of the movie well when she said it shows that when we are resisting something with all our heart and soul, itâs very likely the thing God wants for us. Thereâs more to the life of any man or woman than can be contained in a little over an hour. Here the focus is solely on his way to faith, which might leave some viewers asking for more. Yet by maintaining a narrow focus weâre able to really appreciate what a monumental transformation this was for Lewis.
Originally a very limited release, The Most Reluctant Convert is now available to rent from all the major digital retailers.(Fellowship for Performing Arts)
About the Author
Trevor Denning is an alumni of Cornerstone University and lives, lifts weights, and spends too much time in his kitchen in Alma, Mich. His first short story collection is St. George Drive and Other Stories.