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29,691 results found
In Cast Away, Chuck Noland survives four years alone on a Pacific island. He loses everything—fiancée, career, civilization. He nearly loses his mind. But he survives, is rescued, and gives a speech to coworkers: "I knew, somehow, that I had to keep breathing.
In Mystic River, three childhood friends are bound together by a kidnapping that scarred them all. Dave, the victim, grows up haunted, his heart never fully clean. Jimmy and Sean grow up differently damaged. Create in me a clean heart, O God.
In First Man, Neil Armstrong volunteers for the impossible: walking on the moon. The mission kills friends, strains his marriage, asks everything. When asked why, Armstrong can barely articulate it. Some missions choose us. Whom shall I send? God asks in Isaiah's vision.
In The Help, Skeeter Phelan writes the stories of Black maids in 1960s Jackson, Mississippi. These invisible women become visible; their humanity becomes undeniable. I was hungry and you gave me something to eat.
In Stand By Me, four 12-year-old boys walk twenty miles to find a dead body. The journey isn't really about the body—it's about friendship forged in shared adventure. Gordie, the narrator, reflects: "I never had any friends later on like...
In Top Gun: Maverick, Pete Mitchell returns to teach young pilots what cannot be taught in simulators—instinct, courage, when to trust the machine and when to trust yourself. At 60, he still flies better than pilots half his age.
In The Pursuit of Happyness, Chris Gardner invests his last $250 in a bone density scanner—a gamble that leaves him homeless with his son. Everyone thinks he's foolish. But he sees a path no one else sees.
In Rush, James Hunt and Niki Lauda are rivals who despise each other—and make each other better. Hunt's recklessness pushes Lauda's precision; Lauda's discipline challenges Hunt's chaos. Neither would be champion without the other. As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another.
In Erin Brockovich, a twice-divorced single mother with no legal training uncovers a massive corporate cover-up poisoning a town's water. She has no credentials—just tenacity and a heart for the victims. "You are the light of the world...
In Dallas Buyers Club, Ron Woodroof—a rodeo cowboy dying of AIDS—becomes an unlikely advocate for HIV patients. Homophobic and self-destructive, Ron initially wants only to save himself. But smuggling medicine transforms him. He befriends Rayon, a transgender woman he once would have despised.
In What Dreams May Come, Chris Nielsen dies and enters a heaven painted from his wife's artwork. But when his wife commits suicide and goes to hell, he descends to rescue her.
In The Blind Side, Leigh Anne Tuohy sees a large Black teenager walking alone in the rain. She could drive past—most would. Instead, she stops. "Do you have a place to stay tonight?" Michael Oher becomes family. "Go and do...
In Rudy, Daniel Ruettiger has no athletic gifts—too small, too slow, not smart enough for Notre Dame. But he has something else: he refuses to quit. After years of rejection, he dresses for one game, gets in for one play, makes one tackle.
In Jerry Maguire, sports agent Jerry writes a mission statement at 1 AM: "Fewer clients. Less money. More attention to the people we serve." It costs him his job, his fiancée, most of his life. But he discovers what matters:...
In Frozen, Elsa lives in terror of her own power. She isolates herself, hides her gift, nearly destroys her kingdom with fear-driven ice. Only Anna's sacrificial love—dying to save her sister—breaks the curse.
In Mad Max: Fury Road, water is controlled by a tyrant. The thirsty masses beg for drops while Immortan Joe hoards abundance. Furiosa steals his wives and his water truck, seeking a mythical Green Place. As the deer pants for...
In 50/50, Adam Lerner—a healthy 27-year-old—learns he has spinal cancer. His world collapses. But each morning he wakes up, and each morning is both terrifying and merciful. His therapist, his best friend, his fractured family—all become channels of grace he couldn't see before diagnosis.
In Titanic, as the ship sinks, many reveal their true character. The band plays on. The captain goes down with the ship. Rose finds a floating door but Jack stays in the freezing water, ensuring she survives.
In The Secret Garden, Mary Lennox arrives at Misselthwaite Manor bitter, unloved, and unloving. She discovers a hidden garden, dead from neglect. As she tends it back to life, she herself is transformed—her sour disposition softened, her cousin healed, the manor restored.
In 127 Hours, Aron Ralston is trapped alone in a canyon, arm pinned by a boulder. For five days he faces death in isolation. The film flashes to memories of community he took for granted—family, friends, a woman he loved carelessly.
In War of the Worlds, Ray Ferrier tries to protect his children from alien invasion. Everything fails—cars, phones, the military. Civilization collapses in hours. But Ray keeps his children alive through every catastrophe. God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble.
In The Bourne Identity, Jason Bourne wakes with no memory of who he was—only skills and instincts. As his past resurfaces, he must choose: become the assassin he was, or become someone new. He chooses new.
In Patch Adams, Hunter Adams rejects sterile, detached medicine. He clowns in children's cancer wards, learns patients' names, treats people instead of diseases. The medical establishment calls him unprofessional. But his patients heal—sometimes in body, always in spirit. "It is...
In The Avengers, a god, a super-soldier, a genius billionaire, a rage monster, and two spies must work together—or the world ends. Each has unique gifts; none can succeed alone.