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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Eerie deja vu, November 22, 2005
By 
J. Martelle (Seattle, WA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Ticket to Heaven (DVD)
In the late 70's I got caught up in the Moonie cult for a time in Northern California. This is a very accurate portrayal of the moonies of that time and place, right down to the rickety converted chicken coop they had their talks in, the cult member who follows you everwhere, the "choo choo yay pow" cheer. (Yes they really did use that!) The enforced conformity, The famous dodge ball game with chanting. Deadly accurate.
Though the material is dated, and the ranch in the countryside where The moonies brought recruits is long since shut down, it's still a great film to watch...and to show your kids if you want to help them learn to avoid being sucked into cults of many kinds.
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great film, deserves to be better known...., April 17, 2006
This review is from: Ticket to Heaven (DVD)
This film is very difficult to find on VHS and/or DVD. I saw it in a DVD store for 10 bucks a few years ago, so I picked it up. The film is a terrifying, intense, very realistic one, depicting with great accuracy the truth about cults. Nick Manusco gives an excellent performance as David, the young man who gets caught up in the cult. He has just broken up with his girlfriend, and decides to visit a friend of his in southern California. David doesn't know that his friend is in a cult. They program David through various methods, including lack of sleep, moving around and around without reason, lack of protein in the food they eat, isolation, and fellow cult members following him around at all times. Saul Rubinek plays his friend who finds out where he is, and helps get him out with a deprogrammer. The film isn't perfect. There are noticable continuity flubs, awkward edits, misplaced comic relief (even though the sign "it's always amateur night" in the comedy club is hilarious), but these are minor compared with the intensity and accuracy of the film. This film was made in Canada (when Canadian film production was at a nadir), and it's a lot more realistic than a Hollywood film would be about the same subject. There are excellent performances all around (check out a very young Kim Catrall as Debbie, a cult member who is scary in her loyalty to "Father"). Hopefully, somebody will reissue this film....
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A gutsy expose on how religious cults work, December 4, 2005
By 
Mellow Monk (Livermore, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ticket to Heaven (DVD)
You have to hand it to the Canadians for having the guts to make such a true-to-life movie about cults: how they recruit, how they brainwash, how they make money. A little more contrast between the blind euphoria of the lower-tier cultists and the opulent, materialistic ways of the upper echelon would have been nice. And the movie was obviously made on a shoestring budget, which no doubt is hard to accept for someone raised on Hollywood production values. But Hollywood would NEVER make a film like this -- not with all the cultists running around in Tinsel Town! They'd boycott the production. Solid performances are turned in by Nick Mancuso as the "lost soul," Saul Rubinek as the friend who won't give up on him, Kim Cattrall as a bundle-of-energy cultist (actually one of the scariest characters in the film), and R. H. Thomson as the deprogrammer. If you can get past the made-for-TV-movie feel, this film is an excellent way to teach your kids about how cults operate and what they're really all about: money. --MellowMonk.com
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Deserving a remastered DVD release, May 2, 2006
By 
Sheri Richardson (Formerly San Jose, CA US, now in the Wilds of OR US) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ticket to Heaven (DVD)
TICKET TO HEAVEN is a most effective film, one that flew through theaters far too quickly on its initial run (thanks for the tip, Siskel & Ebert), shedding light on any number of obsessions. The focus is on a religious cult, but could as easily center around any pursuit where, with all the attractive chaff winnowed away, the end aim is making money for the top dogs or ideals. Where membership comes with a strident urging to include friends and relations.

As Linc Strunc (R.H. Thomson's extraordinary performance in a Genie-winning role) says, "It's the smart ones" who prove the most difficult to deprogram.

Nick Mancuso's David is intelligent, but he lacks what many are missing: Close human contact, permission to touch someone without fear or evoking sexual connotations. For many, that's like the difference between hugging your parents as a child, and the wall that goes up when you must "be a man" or "put away childish things".

The tools used to unhinge David's rationale are Legion: Beauty, peace, and belonging held up as within-reach (but cunningly and perpetually unattainable) goals. Simple messages that snowball. Inquisitiveness and discussion trampled as selfish distractions, with some subtle belittling. Repetition to instill new habits, relentlessly grinding in new beliefs. And then there's the food, and toying with body chemistry -- good science abused by clever minds.

A fine, memorable ensemble cast, from Guy Boyd's Eric, to Robert Joy's Patrick, to Timothy Webber's Greg, right down to Michael Wincott (THE CROW) in a minor role. Many of Canada's very best performers.

Saul Rubinek, who played nearly the same character in AGAINST ALL ODDS, goes to the other end of the scale here, however. A stalwart friend, Larry, never giving up however hard things get. A solid performance, one that embedded Rubinek's name in this reviewer's mind.

Paul Soles and Marcia Diamond are splendid as David's parents. Harvey Atkin adds some nice texture as Larry's boss. Who could say "no" to Kim Cattrall when she's this welcoming, and who wouldn't blanch before Meg Foster at her eeriest. Stephen Markle, as Karl, is a voice of reason who nonetheless does this to his friend, David.

And Nick Mancuso (HEARTBREAKERS, but who first impressed this reviewer in NIGHTWING) shines as David. Mancuso's a journeyman actor, always working, but rarely has a role so showcased his talents as TICKET TO HEAVEN. A performance you won't soon forget.

Most definitely deserving a new DVD release.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bring in the Money, Stay Awake, Smash Out Satan!!, March 25, 2005
By 
Lost Treasures "losttreasures" (plymouth meeting, pa United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ticket to Heaven (DVD)
Best film on religious cults yet!. Actually, this was the first of 3 films I have viewed on mind controlling religious cults. All three of the films were made in the early 80's a time when religious cults were at a high rise. Seen selling flowers in large city streets and airports.

Ticket to Heaven not only explains how someone of high intelligence can become involved in a cult. It makes it believable, unlike " BLINDED BY THE LIGHT"starring Kristy McNichol and real life brother Jimmy McNichol and "SPLIT IMAGE" starring Michael O'Keefer and Peter Fonda. Which if you haven't seen "Ticket to Heaven " before viewing these other films, would leave you with the feeling that only the weak minded, or troubled souls could be brainwashed into this way of life.

The deprogramming method of the cult victim David played by Nick Mancuso is brilliantly and intensely done by R. H. Thomson ( role Link Strunk) . Also to be credited for adding some comedy to the film is Saul Rubinek who plays David's best friend Larry.

(Excuse the pun) A true Cult Classic!! You will not be disappointed !
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Harrowing Tale, January 8, 2000
By 
Russell J. Sanders (Houston, TX United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Ticket to Heaven (DVD)
What an amazing movie! Ticket to Heaven takes us on a bumpy ride through cult hell. David, played by Nick Mancuso, is, after a failed romance, primed for being sucked into a Moonie-like cult. His descent into hell and his friends' journey to pull him out make for riveting entertainment and thought provoking viewing. No one will forget the final few moments when you say to yourself, "What just happened here?"
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "Nananananananana leader, leader, leader!", January 17, 2008
This review is from: Ticket to Heaven (DVD)
This is an excellent dramatization of how an ordinary man (an atheist Jew no less!) fell under the influence of a religious cult- modeled on the Moonies- and how he was eventually rescued and deprogrammed. It's a gripping movie, featuring several now-famous actors before they were well-known. I think it's an important movie for the light it shines on the workings of our weak, needy human psyche and the accusing finger it points at all groups which employ spiritually and mentally manipulative tactics to ensnare and retain members.

If this film's message were limited to cults, I wouldn't be that interested. After all, how many people are really going off to live on communes under the direct control of some semi-divine leader? I don't think cults, per se, are such a big problem. Where I think we see the most widespread use of cultish practices is in many of the charismatic megachurches and their denominational offshoots that have proliferated throughout our suburbs and our airwaves.

Where else do we find such expert use of love-bombing, personality alteration, group elitism, sensory overload, financial exploitation and psychological manipulation carried out in support of a charismatic, authoritarian and unaccountable leader (pastor/prophet/apostle) whose messages are believed to be divinely inspired? The situation has gotten so bad that Congress is now holding hearings about some of these televangelists who have gotten obscenely rich telling their followers that God's blessings depend on how much money they donate to these pastors' ministries. I'm glad that these people are being put under public scrutiny, because one of the techniques used to deprogram a cult member is to expose the hypocrisy or worldliness of the holy leader. However, the preponderance of such churches blunts much of the positive effect the prison sentence of a Peter Popoff or Benny Hinn might have- their followers will easily just find another leader in the next time-slot on TBN. Hopefully, enough exposure might eventually cause a change, God willing.

I guess the lesson here is that we all want to be loved, and need a sense of belonging and importance somewhere. The trick is to be aware that a lot of people want to love you for their own ends, which may not be in your best interest. True love requires the surrender of your heart, not your mind. Jesus told us to be "wise as serpents and innocent as doves." (MT 10:16) A tough combo, to be sure, but necessary if we're to avoid ending up selling flowers in airports or giving our credit card number to TV preachers in flamboyant suits.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Creepy, real, important and scary, March 30, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Ticket to Heaven (DVD)
Anyone who has been in a cult, knows or knew someone in a cult, or finds extreme belief systems interesting, you'll find this movie to be amazing. My eyes watered because I didn't want to blink and miss anything. Check it out.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Chillingly accurate, December 15, 2008
By 
This review is from: Ticket to Heaven (DVD)
I still get chills whenever I watch this. In 1976, I spent a week in Boonville on the Moonie farm that is portrayed in this movie. I can recognize every aspect of the experience in the movie, and can identify individuals, particularly the "boot camp" trainer portrayed by Kim Cattrall. The chanting on the bus. The singing of "Red, Red Robin" at the crack of dawn. The dodgeball games. The never being allowed to be alone. The "philosophical" lectures. Fortunately, I was not psychologically weak and had no need to belong to a group, plus I am a lifelong atheist. I got bored and left after a week (they did not try to hold me by force). It was only much later that I discovered that this was an indoctrination camp for Reverend Moon, as they do not reveal this fact early on. If you want to understand the reality of the process of becoming a mindless cultist, this is the film to watch!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good movie to watch, even if you haven't been in a cult., March 24, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Ticket to Heaven (DVD)
Ticket to Heaven is an honest look at one young man who gets sucked into a cult.Nick Mancuso's character, David, has just broken up with his girlfriend. When he goes to find solice in his friend in California, he becomes entangled in a fanatical religious group that turns out to be a cult. The movie follows David's struggles getting in and hopefully, getting out.The film takes a really honest approach showing how easy it is to get into the middle of a cult without knowing it. It shows the different tactics used by cults to wear you down and turn you into a part of their group. Nick Mancuso does an excellent job portraying David, who though reluctant and struggling a lot with his decision, decides to join. Mancuso's character really shows how listening and giving in little by little to a cult's activities makes one more susceptible to them.This movie is a must-see for those who have ever experienced something like this. It is a real refresher to see where you have come from since you left. It is a real learning experience to see some of things that maybe made you susceptible to joining a cult.If you are a parent with a child in this situation it shows what your child may be going through or experiencing and will show you what it may be like to get them out.Even if you haven't been in a situation like this, it is a captivating film to watch and see the struggles that are involved and maybe catch some of ideas of staying out of a cult.
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