Miracles From Heaven (2024)

  • PG
  • Drama

Content Caution

MediumKids

LightTeens

LightAdults

Miracles From Heaven (1)

Credits

In Theaters

  • March 16, 2016

Cast

  • Jennifer Garner as Christy Beam; Martin Henderson as Kevin Beam; Kylie Rogers as Annabel Beam; Queen Latifah as Angela; Eugenio Derbez as Dr. Nurko; John Carroll Lynch as Pastor Scott

Movie Review

Lots of kids get sick. And then they get better.

And that’s exactly what happened to Annabel Beam. But how did it happen?

Anna kept throwing up every time she ate. And after multiple medical diagnoses pointing to common ailments—lactose intolerance, acid reflux—doctors realized that Anna’s problem wasn’t common at all. To the contrary, she had a deadly gastrointestinal ailment. And it was incurable, too.

Anna’s ongoing physical anguish and occasional agony made her mom, Christy, hunt harder and harder for some kind of solution. And Christy also had to hunt harder and harder to find what was left of her faith as she grew increasingly angry at the thick-headed Christians around her and the church she used to love.

It’s fair to say that she was none too pleased with the way God was letting her innocent daughter suffer.

It truly can be difficult to feel God’s love when things seem bleak and hopeless, when pain and misery are a regular part of our day. But those can also be the times when we reach out most fervently and sense God’s loving and steady presence in almost overwhelming ways.

Christy and Anna Beam knew both sides of that spiritual experience. And they had to make a choice which they were going to cling to.

The vaunted theoretical physicist Albert Einstein once said, “There are two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle.”

This is the Beam family’s true story … of everything being a miracle.

Positive Elements

Miracles From Heaven focuses on Christy Beam’s tireless efforts to try to help her sick child. But in truth, every member of the Beam family gives his or her all and sacrifices a great deal to rally to Anna’s side. For instance, all of them repeatedly state their unwavering love and support. Dad works long hours and sells favorite family possessions to foot medical bills. Sisters Adelyn and Abbie even go so far as to limit their own diets to stand in solidarity with their suffering sibling (to the point where sharing a slice of cheese pizza later on is an incredible celebration). Neighbors and some friends from church do what they can, too—from babysitting to simply being there as supportive friends.

A woman named Angela, a stranger at first, goes out of her way to bring cheer to Christy and Anna when they travel to a specialized pediatrics clinic in Boston. With repeated visits, Angela becomes a beloved friend and confidant. Doctors and nurses, even the receptionist at the hospital, are seen going out of their way to help.

Spiritual Elements

Questions about faith and the role it plays in our lives run throughout this story. Christy struggles mightily with her spiritual resolve, lashing out at both God and the church. But she never quite walks away, even when she cries, “I don’t have faith about anything! I can’t even pray.” In Job-like fashion, other Christians blame Anna’s illness on her family’s sin, and those callous comments contribute to driving Christy away from church. But her husband is always there to give a word of encouragement and spiritual support. And in the end, after Anna is miraculously healed, the girl’s life spared not just from a terrible fall, but also from her disease, Christy goes back to church and tells her “family” there the whole story of her journey. “Miracles are God’s way of letting us know He’s here,” she says.

Rendered unconscious after falling down the inside of a giant, hollowed-out tree, Anna later recounts going to heaven and talking with God. While showing her walking through a lush, Technicolor garden and then on top of the clouds above, the film, for its part, leaves the absolute factualness of her claims up to the determination of moviegoers. (Is it a dream? Is it real?) But it never doubts whether God’s hand was involved in the miraculous gift Anna receives.

At the Boston hospital, Anna talks with a terminally ill girl about the cross she always wears, saying it reminds her that Jesus is with her. She then gives the girl her necklace and affirms that Jesus can be with her, too. The girl’s father is irritated that Anna is filling his daughter’s head with “that sort of thing.” And he confronts Christy about it. But he later attests to the fact that his dying daughter “felt safe, she felt … God” in her waning days, thanks to that encounter.

Sexual Content

Christy and her husband, Kevin, kiss. He strips off his shirt to change for church, showing his chiseled physique.

Violent Content

Anna falls 30 feet headfirst down the middle of the dead and hollowed-out tree. Rescuers worry over severe head trauma and spinal injury. And when she’s pulled out, she’s covered with bloody scrapes.

Though not technically violence, we see Anna in a great deal of physical pain and misery due to her disease. We witness vomiting, invasive medical procedures and tube feedings. In fact, we see enough of that turmoil and torture that when we get to the point of Anna saying, “I want to die … I want to go to heaven where there’s no pain,” her momentary outcry feels completely understandable.

Crude or Profane Language

Two or three exclamations of “oh my god.”

Drug and Alcohol Content

Angela says she’s trying to quit smoking. Anna is given drug injections through shots and IV lines. Christy lists all the many medications her daughter must take in a single day.

Other Negative Elements

We see Anna in her underwear.

A few Christians in Christy’s church reject any talk of miraculous happenings, suggesting, wrongly, that Anna may have been faking illness to seek out publicity.

Conclusion

It can be very difficult to turn stories of faith into good movies. Our spiritual relationship and our belief in God are precious, ethereal things. They’re hard to honestly and vibrantly represent in a 90-minute motion picture. Knowing that, sometimes moviemakers try too hard to compensate, wringing out passionate feelings and gritting their cinematic smiles a tad too fiercely.

Miracles From Heaven takes a slightly different tack, trying to bring viewers into the pathos and drama of a little girl’s illness and her family’s desperation in a universally relatable way. It’s a well-acted, well-directed and earnest film: Jennifer Garner and Kylie Rogers make us want to put an arm around them as we long for some kind of help to appear on the horizon.

And it does. Coming in a way that presents an emotional testimony to suffering and miracles, with a gentle grace that even those hesitant to believe will understand and appreciate. “They’ll get there when they get there,” Anna says softly after her mom suggests that many people won’t be able to swallow the miraculous and heavenly things that the young girl claims took place. And that sums up the movie’s attitude as well.

This is a very human-feeling drama that’s still all about God’s priorities, God’s choices and God’s timing. The filmmakers quietly take on the role of dramatic chroniclers, saying, as softly as Anna does, Here’s what happened and what we believe. You think it through and come along when and if you will.

Miracles From Heaven (2)

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Miracles From Heaven (3)

Bob Hoose

After spending more than two decades touring, directing, writing and producing for Christian theater and radio (most recently for Adventures in Odyssey, which he still contributes to), Bob joined the Plugged In staff to help us focus more heavily on video games. He is also one of our primary movie reviewers.

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Miracles From Heaven (2024)

FAQs

What was wrong with the girl in Miracles from Heaven? ›

Anna had been sick since she was 4 with pseudo-obstruction motility disorder and antral hypomotility disorder, illnesses for which there is no cure. The nerves and muscles in her intestines didn't contract normally, and as a result food, fluid, and air weren't able to properly move through Anna's body.

What is the main message of Miracle from Heaven? ›

The main messages from this movie are that faith makes all things possible and you'll be rewarded for never giving up.

Was Miracles from Heaven fake? ›

Harvard Medical School Professor Says 'Miracles From Heaven' And Other Remarkable Cures Could Be Real. Miracles From Heaven is based on the incredible true story of the Beam family.

How far did the girl fall in Miracles from Heaven? ›

The book is about the author's then-10-year-old daughter, Annabel Beam, who was diagnosed with a rare terminal stomach disorder. During a visit home from the hospital, she fell; while climbing a tree with her older sister, a branch gave way, sending Annabel 30 feet headfirst into the hollow trunk of a cottonwood tree.

What is the controversy of miracles? ›

Yet despite constituting a significant proportion of Christ's ministry, miracles and exorcisms remain controversial. Various scholars over the centuries have tried to divorce the so-called historical Jesus from his miracles, which they hold to be merely mythological accretions added to his story by his followers.

Does Anna survive in Miracles from Heaven? ›

And in the end, after Anna is miraculously healed, the girl's life spared not just from a terrible fall, but also from her disease, Christy goes back to church and tells her “family” there the whole story of her journey. “Miracles are God's way of letting us know He's here,” she says.

What happened to Haley in Miracles from Heaven? ›

It's Ben. He says that Haley just recently passed away, which makes Anna cry. However, Ben found peace knowing that after her meeting with Anna, Haley had God in her heart and went peacefully. The last scene has the Beams have a pizza dinner outside now that Anna is all better.

How did miracles from heaven end? ›

Dr. Nurko confirms her “spontaneous remission.” Later, Anna shares with her parents that she experienced Heaven while in the tree and that God told her she would be healed. Christy returns to church to share Anna's story and to encourage others to look for the everyday miracles that demonstrate God's love and presence.

What religion is in Miracles from Heaven? ›

But although the film is centered on Christian-based faith, it argues for the power of miracles that are more terrestrial and quotidian. Garner plays Christy Beam, mother to Anna (Kylie Rogers), who suffers from a debilitating, incurable intestinal disorder.

Is Jennifer Garner religious? ›

Religious beliefs

Although Garner stopped attending church regularly after moving to Los Angeles, her three children were baptized as members of the United Methodist Church in her hometown of Charleston, West Virginia. In 2015, she and her family began attending weekly Methodist church services in Los Angeles.

What true story is Miracles from Heaven based on? ›

The film is based on a memoir by Christy Beam, a Texas mother whose daughter, Annabel, suffered from a rare, incurable digestive disorder. After she fell into the hollow trunk of a tree on their property, something unbelievable happened. Tests revealed Annabel's rare and incurable disease was gone.

Who dies in Miracles from Heaven? ›

He also shares that Haley died peacefully as Anna gave her faith when in the hospital (Anna is saddened by this news because Haley was a dear friend). In the end, the Beams spend some quality time together and Christy says to always believe in miracles.

Who is the real Annabelle from Miracles from Heaven? ›

Not everyone has a movie and book based on their real-life saga, but 13-year-old Annabel Beam knows what that feels like. Sitting on her couch in Cleburne, Texas, she discusses the differences between the upcoming movie Miracles From Heaven, which stars Jennifer Garner, and her mother's book by the same name.

Is Miracles from Heaven sad? ›

It's a heartbreaking story that ends with a very uplifting message. The idea being that miracles are everywhere, even if it's just someone helping you out in a tough situation.

Where was Miracles from Heaven shot? ›

From Covington to Conyers to Dunwoody, "Miracles from Heaven" was filmed entirely in Georgia. See director Patricia Riggen and the the production team talk about the experience in this exclusive video!

What is the story behind The Girl Who Believes in Miracles? ›

When young Sara hears a preacher say that faith can move mountains, she starts praying. Suddenly, people in her town are mysteriously healed--but fame soon takes its toll. When young Sara hears a preacher say that faith can move mountains, she starts praying.

How old was Annabel Beam when she was diagnosed? ›

Annabel Beam was just 5 when she was diagnosed. with two incurable disorders. The illnesses kept her in. and out of the hospital and treatments barely worked.

What is the girl that believes in miracles about? ›

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