I found it suffered what most modern Christian movies suffer from. Too much attention focused on the moral/message they were trying to bring across, and not enough focus on the actual quality of the script, plot, and acting. Granted this film does it better than others I've seen like The Climb or The Visitation, which were just awful. The message is important, but that doesn't mean the quality of the movie needs to be ignored for it. The Ten Commandments didn't do that, that movie was amazingly put together (well the graphics sucked but given the time it was made that can be forgiven), and it still got its message across. Christian directors should seriously take notes while watching that movie, it would help them immensely. Tis a pity it's too late to recruit Charlton Heston in their films though...