The R.M.
The R.M. is a 2003 comedy film about the experiences of an LDS returned missionary. "RM" is an LDS initialism for "returned missionary". It was written by Kurt Hale and John E. Moyer and directed by Kurt Hale.
The R.M. | |
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Directed by | Kurt Hale |
Produced by | Dave Hunter |
Written by | Kurt Hale, John E. Moyer |
Starring | Kirby Heyborne, Daryn Tufts, Will Swenson, Britani Bateman, Tracy Ann Evans, Merrill Dodge, Michael Birkeland, Maren Ord Gary Crowton |
Music by | Cody Hale |
Distributed by | Halestorm Entertainment |
Release date | January 31, 2003 [1] |
Running time | 101 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | $500,000 |
Box office | $1,111,615 |
Plot
Jared Phelps returns home from his mission in Wyoming to find a world very different from the one he left two years previously.
This movie opens with a send-off at the airport full of family and friends of Elder Phelps. He serves a two-year mission in the Wyoming, Evanston South Mission. The opening credits are shown by using instant photographs. They also show Elder Phelps going from a "greenie" (new missionary), to district leader, to zone leader and finally to an assistant to the mission president.
Returning home, things do not go so well. His parents thought that he was coming home the following month, so no one is there to meet him at the airport. He did not receive the letter that his family had moved, so he is surprised by the greeting of the new homeowner in the form of a karate kick while he is in the shower. (He later refers to this as being "Kung-fued by a naked ninja".) His bed is now occupied by a foreign exchange student from Tonga. When he is reunited with his parents, he discovers his mother is pregnant. Jared's girlfriend, who promised to wait for him to return, is getting married in two weeks. The jewelry store where he bought the ring will not take it back. And his former employer who promised to give him a job on his return has sold the business and started an Internet enterprise and the only job opening is to mine diamonds in South Africa.
Things become worse from there. He is rejected from Brigham Young University. He quickly goes through a series of jobs and even considers selling knives. He develops a romantic relationship with Kelly, the daughter of H. Ronald Powers, a general authority who, to his embarrassment, he is unfamiliar with (despite the fact that he gave a "great talk" last October in General Conference, to whom everyone seems to refer). While Jared is on a date with Kelly, his mother goes into labor and has a boy. He also has boils and eventually is arrested due to the actions of a friend. Because of the arrest, he is fired from his job and released from his church calling as elders quorum president. He has to seriously consider whether to lie and keep him and his friend out of jail, or to tell the truth and send himself and/or his friend to jail. In the end, he decides to tell the truth, and is ultimately cleared of all charges, but his friend must face some time in jail.
Later, Jared gives a talk at church about how his mission blessed his life in ways he did not expect. He decides to take night classes and reapply for Brigham Young in the fall. After some time dating Kelly, the two are seen in a jewelry shop to exchange Jared's old ring for a new one, as they are now engaged.
Selected credits
Cast
- Kirby Heyborne, Jared Phelps
- Britani Bateman, Kelly Powers
- Will Swenson, Kori Swenson
- Gary Crowton, Bishop Andrews
- Fred Derbyshire, Crazy grandpa
- Wally Joyner, Brother Jensen
- Larry H. Miller, himself (cameo)
Reception
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 64% based on 11 reviews.[2] The Salt Lake City based newspaper Deseret News gave a negative review of the film saying it tried to do too much with some awful local celebrity cameos. [3] Variety gave a more positive review describing it as "Good natured and innocuously wholesome".[4] Movieguide gave it a negative review from a religious perspective, giving the film a -4, the lowest score, on its acceptability rating indicating gross immorality or worldview problems.[5] The film grossed a total of $1.1 million and made $130,352 on its opening weekend.[6]
See also
- The Singles Ward — 2002
- The Best Two Years — 2003
- The Home Teachers — 2004
References
- "The R.M. (2003)". IMDb. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- "The R.M. (2003)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
- "Film review: R.M., The". Deseret News. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
- "The R.M. - Variety". Variety. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
- "The R.M. Movieguide". Movieguide. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
- "The R.M. - Box Office Mojo". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 4 February 2021.