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Dove:
Many people know you as an actor but we’ve followed your filmmaking career over
the past few years. 3 Day Test is the first comedy we’ve seen from you.
Corbin: “On a bigger scale it goes to a goal
that I have which is to just make a good movie. One of my longer goals is to
have a movie that is more traditional than most faith films. In comedies, you
don’t typically think about faith. Faith movies are usually more message
driven, heavy handed and stay on point. I feel we’ve succeeded in our own way
with a modest budget, modest crews, and modest resources in making a more
commercial movie. If someone wants to go away with the faith message and take
it home with them that’s great but someone else may say it’s just a fun movie
and I think that’s great too. Humor is a beautiful gift God has given us so
lets not make everything too serious.”
“My journey is to keep opening up to God - to
get closer and closer. I’ll never get completely there. The more I question,
the closer I get. I tell people the coloring book of my life and the presence
of God in my life is richer with everything I experience. Right now, it’s all
about truth, love, beauty, kindness and grace. To know those things, you have
to know humor.”
Dove: We’ve noticed that your films all have
subtle messages of faith but aren’t preachy. Why have you chosen this path?
Corbin: “Our films have faith elements but
really focus on entertainment for the family. The fact that there is faith in
them is important to me because my personal belief comes from a Christian
worldview. Family to me is essential. It’s the very foundation block of which
we can build society. We build our families strong, our strong families build
communities, communities build main street, main street builds countries,
countries build nations, I think it starts with families.”
“As you know I like analogies. Sometimes a
family can become comfortable like pair of old shoes. They feel comfortable,
protect you from the warm pavement or the rocky path but if you wear a shoe too
long, the laces begin to loosen, they fray and I think it’s important to keep
the laces strong. Faith is like the laces that hold families together. It
plays a behind the scenes role. We look at the family and make sure we have
money and food on the table and all these great expectations. You look at the
sole of the shoe before you do the laces. The laces play this quite role in
everything we do.”
Dove:
You are very involved in your movies. As an actor, writer, director and
producer you certainly have your hands full with each project. What do you
attribute your success to?
Corbin: “On an experiential side I have 35
years in this business. I didn’t say all of the sudden, ‘Hey, I’m in a church
and I want to make movies about God.’ I have a grounding in the art and history
of my craft and I think that brings a lot to it. But more specifically God is
the master producer. My pursuit toward God is a pursuit of truth. There is
simplicity in that. Without meaning to sound esoteric, there is a correct sofa
in a scene and an incorrect sofa. My goal is to combine the right elements in
everything I do.”
“Detail is everything to me. Detail is about
the truth. You see it in nature. God is the author of nature. You can’t see a
mountain range or a river flowing and not feel God’s presence in that because as
C.S. Lewis once said ‘everything is as it awt be.’ I try to incorporate
that sense of awe in our movies because I think that’s what people will respond
to. My friends have told me that I have done my best acting in my own movies.
I think that’s because I’m so busy with so many other things that when I step in
front of the camera their is not one moment of my head getting in the way. I
simply have to stand there and say the lines so I can move on to the next
thing. There’s simplicity in that. When I’m just acting for hire, I’m in my
dressing room, taking a phone call, doing an interview, say ‘hold on, I’ll be
there in a second guys’, then try to jump into a scene, interpret it, then get
back out to do something else. When I do my movies, I’m in the zone, I’m in the
game. I don’t have to think about it.”
Dove: Of all the hats you wear on a project,
do you have a favorite?
Corbin: “I do like the ‘trifecta’ of the
writing/acting/directing. The producing part; raising money, selling the films,
all the things you have to do, you sometimes feel like you’re manipulating
people to make that part work. As someone said to me recently ‘it’s playing the
game’, I’d rather not do that part but it’s a necessary evil. You’ve got to
have money to make a movie. Then you’ve got to be responsible to the money.”
“My most direct communication with God is in
the writing. When I’m directing its all about the detail but when I’m looking
at a blank page, I’m sitting with the Lord, looking at a blue sky and saying
‘where are we going? What do you want? Take my pen and guide me.’ That is the
deepest part of the three and when it works that’s what I take the most pride in
– sometimes we’re allowed to be proud.”
Dove: Were there some challenges in making 3
Day Test?
Corbin: “You know who I am and what I want to
accomplish. My mission is to say to people, ‘open your arms and say it just
might be possible.’ The difficulty is the business part of it. In the pursuit
of the mission, the economics of this business are that if you do an ‘alter call
move…a come to Jesus move…a stick to the scripture movie with imagery that is
specifically Christian’ you’ll do good business - if you can tell a good
story. But those movies aren’t going to make somebody new say ‘maybe I’ll
consider all of this.’ In fact you could argue that somebody who is against
[Christianity] could be driven further away. The difficulty for us is that the
movies we make are not ‘alter call’ movies. Pastors aren’t going to stand in
the pulpit and say ‘3 Day Test’ is the kind of movie that will change your
life. So do I start sticking stuff in my movies just to ‘play the game?’ Do I
alter the truth of what I want to be doing to make my movies fit-in with a
specific targeted audience? I don’t see a lot of Christian comedies out there
but I think we’ve weaved those two elements together into this film in subtle
ways.”
Dove: We think so too! We encourage you to
take a look at Dove’s review of “3 Day Test” and if you like what you see, pick
up a copy and continue to support family values in entertainment. If you do,
Corbin and others like him will continue making film’s that your family can
watch together.
Read Dove's Review of "3 Day Test"
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