Left Behind II: Tribulation Force
Left Behind II: Tribulation Force
PG-13 | 29 October 2002 (USA)
Left Behind II: Tribulation Force Trailers

After millions vanish, a group of people must band together to form the Tribulation Force and prepare themselves for the worst seven years the planet has ever seen.

Reviews
Hellen I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much
Phonearl Good start, but then it gets ruined
Darin One of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.
Cheryl A clunky actioner with a handful of cool moments.
Desertman84 Left Behind II: Tribulation Force is a direct-to-video Christian apocalyptic/thriller and the second of the trilogy that was based on the Left Behind book series written by Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins.Kirk Cameron and Brad Johnson returns in a story that tells about how four people of faith must take it upon themselves to be responsible for the salvation of humanity.The story starts at the conclusion of the first film wherein millions of people around the world suddenly disappeared into thin air without any apparent reason.This placed the world into chaos.Nicolae Carpathia,the president of the United Nations and an international media magnate,steps forward to guide the different nations into this time of chaos.But television journalist Buck Williams know the real reason behind those disappearance as predicted from the Bible and he knows very well that Carpathia is an anti-Christ.It is up to Williams together with the three remaining believers - pastor and biblical scholar Bruce Barnes, airline pilot- turned-believer Rayford Steele and Steele's headstrong 20-year-old daughter, Chloe to save mankind.This is an improvement as compared to the first film in terms of the film's technical aspect such as the action scenes and the sound.Also,the story becomes more interesting in the sense that four believers try to stop the anti-Christ into leading the world into a direction different from a Christian perspective. But as a Christian film,it is still lacking as it is more of a science fiction and an action film rather than than of trying to impart a good Christian message.The conclusion can be considered Hollywood cliché rather than a believable Christian conversion.
irquim First of all, I want to say that I did not watch the first one, and after seeing the movie, I couldn't understand how something like this was ever sold to the public in the first place. My first impression was that this had to be a cheap commercial for a Christian community or something.The acting was awful, the script was really bad and the dialogue full of things only priests would try to say in public. This could've been a great film, because the story is there, but the film makers destroyed it.I would only recommend this movie to religious people who love really bad commercials.
whpratt1 Enjoyed the first film,"Left Behind", and found this film contained fantastic scenes of the Crying Wall, and a Rabbi who declares that Jesus Christ is the Lord. There is even a portrayal of the Anti-Christ himself who plans on taking over the world and a TV reporter who is determined to stop him in his tracks. The excellent cast of Christians once again tells the Story of a portion of the Book of Revelations, the last book in the New Testament. Many of the people lost their loved ones, and different people have various sides to the story they want to tell. This film clearly says that if you have Faith in God and Jesus you will never be alone and by His Grace, you will be saved from Eternal Judgement. Amen
xshitz This film is not entertainment, but unabashed Christian propaganda. Actually, it's just a thin, endlessly hokey, unintentionally hilarious farce where a handful of white American Christians save the world.Kirk Cameron is particularly loathsome during a scene where a skeptic leaves a church during a religious pep-talk given by a Cosby-Show-preacher. Cameron's character tries to convince the skeptic that he must be saved by quoting the Ten Commandments to him and showing the guy how he is but a gnat in the eyes of God because he's broken a few of the commandments. I'm sure Ralph Reed, and the rest of them, were lapping this stuff up, but it was as stilted and forced a moment as I've ever seen on screen.Of course the anti-Christ is a foreign person -- no American could fit that bill -- who speaks with a comic Russian accent.Good for a laugh, this film in its DVD form would also make a great drink coaster -- non-alcoholic, of course -- when you're done viewing it.This is film-making at its most contrived and forgettable.