“EVERY PERSON IS VALUABLE AND LOVED BY GOD”
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:
IDENTITY CRISIS is a fun, faith-based family comedy on video. It follows a smart but overly shy college girl. Madison is a bookworm loner who has a crush on a guy named Trevor but feels she’s too bookish to catch his attention. Using an old computer from a 1990s cloning experiment, Madison creates her own clone with the bold confidence Madison lacks. The clone soon overtakes her life, acing her science class, impressing friends, and winning over Trevor. Madison realizes she needs to live her own life with the clone’s confidence and good spirits. Can Madison be a better person on her own terms?
IDENTITY CRISIS is the latest faith-based film written and produced by the popular Boylan Sisters duo. It matches their successful string of family movies including SWITCHED. Sisters Scout Tayui-Lepore and Sophia Lepore are great fun in the lead roles, Also, the movie has an underlying message that every person is valuable and loved by God as part of His creation. With no objectionable content, IDENTITY CRISIS is a good movie for all ages in the family to watch together.
CONTENT:
(CCC, BBB, V, M)
Dominant Worldview and Other Worldview Content/Elements:
Very strong Christin, biblical worldview has an underlying message that every person is valuable and loved by God as part of His creation
Foul Language:
No foul language
Violence:
Woman pushes a man backwards into a swimming pool when he tries to
Sex:
No sex
Nudity:
No nudity
Alcohol Use:
No alcohol use
Smoking and/or Drug Use and Abuse:
No smoking or drugs; and,
Miscellaneous Immorality:
A college student creates a clone and then spends much of the movie switching places with her clone in various situations and trying not to get discovered (this story is played for goofy, harmless fun and winds up having an uplifting message.
MORE DETAIL:
IDENTITY CRISIS is a fun, faith-based family comedy on video that follows a smart but overly shy college girl named Madison, a bookworm who chooses to constantly study or work in her college library rather than socialize but encounters all sorts of comical problems when she creates her own clone who’s everything she’s not.
Madison has a crush on a guy named Trevor but feels she’s too bookish to catch his attention. Madison discovers an old computer from a cloning experiment in the 1990s and suddenly creates her own clone. The clone is programmed to be everything she’s not: bold, assertive and confident, and it soon overtakes her life, acing her science class, impressing friends, and winning over Trevor.
Madison tries to hide the clone, but its bubbly personality refuses to be stuck in a closet. It soon lives Madison’s life in a better way than she herself can, whether it’s in the classroom, out with Madison’s friends, or making a romantic connection with Trevor.
When Madison’s own family takes the clone home for Thanksgiving instead of herself, she realizes it’s time to live her own best life. Can Madison convince the clone to let her shine on her own? Will she accept her biology professor’s caring advice that she is God’s own special creation?
IDENTITY CRISIS is the latest faith-based film written and produced by the popular Boylan Sisters duo of Alexandra Boylan and Andrea Polnaszek. It matches their successful string of
family movies, including SWITCHED, which won the MOVIEGUIDE® Awards Kairos screenwriting prize. Sisters Scout Tayui-Lepore and Sophia Lepore are great fun in the lead roles. Happily, IDENTITY CRISIS has an underlying message that every person is valuable and loved by God as part of His creation.
The frequent switcheroos between Madison and the clone can be briefly confusing at times, but IDENTITY CRISIS is refreshingly free of any objectionable content. It’s a good movie for all ages in the family to watch together.