God’s Cadets: Joining the Salvation Army

BBC
 

To be a Salvation Army Officer you make a lifelong promise “to care for the poor, feed the hungry, clothe the naked, love the unlovable, befriend those who have no friends.”

Filmed inside the closed community of The Salvation Army’s Officer Training College in London this documentary explores this intriguingly eccentric British institution. Famous for it’s brass bands, military uniforms, charity work, who would choose, in this day and age, to give up home, job, family to work full time for an Officer’s allowance of £7,500 a year?

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New recruit Darron, gives up a successful career as a baker, selling his families possessions at car-boot sales. Dancer Sylvia’s glamorous ballroom dress is unwrapped for us in a brief outing from the wardrobe, a sparkly symbol of past vanities - now she’s sparkling inside. Annmarie, being taught to work with women in prostitution, tells us the story of Teddy, the first toy she was given aged 5 after being rescued by a Child Protection Team. Then there’s wonderfully honest College Tutor Major Janet who left the Army at 16 to taste the demon drink and ex-vicar’s daughter Katy who pines for a Pimms.

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Humorous comparisons to Harry Potter and Star Wars reveal that cadets sign up to fight in a spiritual war, where good triumphs against evil. Admirably they search for a more meaningful life away from the ‘me’ generation. But will they find it here?

Cadets struggle with petty rules. Darron is disapproved of for his expensive wristwatch, Katy for shopping at Waitrose.

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When another cadet anonymously tells Darron to ‘mind his tongue,’ his feelings of discomfort grow as he questions whether he has joined a sect too reliant on Salvationist families who reinforce its ranks. Is it a sect, clan, brand, tribe, or as Major Janet says “a great big somewhat dysfunctional family?” Approaching its 150th anniversary the Salvation Army remains a unique religious order.

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Brass music artistically weaves into College life, as cadets and staff reveal the heart breaking vulnerabilities and life experiences that led them here. As they strive to join this iconic institution, these Salvation Army cadet’s poignant and intimate revelations draw us into the more universal questions of virtue, faith, doubt and the nature of salvation. Will they despite their pasts reap their reward in heaven?


RUNTIME:
78 Minutes

PRODUCER:
Nick Poyntz

DIRECTOR:
Nick Poyntz

EXECUTIVE PRODUCER:
Brian Woods

RELEASED:
2014

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Reviews

"This 90-minute portrait was so interesting because it left unresolved the question of whether the movement is a sect or not. It would be as closed as the Hasidic communities of Stamford Hill, were it not for its practice of plunging into the sea of povert"
Christopher Howse - Daily Telegrpah

"This documentary was full of interesting insights. If you're sick of those supposedly "behind-the-scenes" workplace documentaries where there's never a cross word, then this was an unexpected dose of candour."
Ellen Jones - The Independent

"Many documentaries are a 20-minute programme padded out to last an hour. God's Cadets: Joining the Salvation Army (BBC4) was a 90-minute film crying out to be extended into a series. "
John Crace - The Guardian

"Nick Poyntz’s patient, revealing, depressing documentary"
Andrew Billen - The Times

"This wonderful film would be worth watching just for the opportunity to meet Major Janet Martin, who is quite simply one of the loveliest people you'll ever see on television."
David Chater - The Times

""If this doesn't work out I'll peruse my dream of becoming a Morris dancer," quips (i think) one of the new recruits..."
Gerard Gilbert - The Independent

"Many of the new intake are sweet and bewildered"
Martin Hoyle - Financial Times

"The deep issues that cadets struggle with are sensitively unearthed, namely the reconciliation between faith and doubt."
Carey Lodge - Christian Today

"An emotional, jolting journey, and a quiet, moving and contemplative study of faith and doubt, strict codes and sacrifice."
Mark Braxton - Radio Times

"Students and staff reflect honestly and movingly on their "calling" here"
Pick of the Day - The Guardian

"Riveting one-off documentary about Salvation Army cadets that's not afraid to be funny or spiritual"
Pick of the Day - The Daily Mail


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