Mar 4, 2015
For most film school students, a successful project means creating a compelling movie that is skillful enough to draw a good grade and maybe even an agent. But for Brian Ivie, making the student short that evolved into the full-length documentary “The Drop Box” changed his life on a far deeper level.
Ivie’s immersion into the world of his subject, South Korean pastor Lee Jong-rak, inspired him to become a Christian himself. Seeing Jong-rak’s selfless devotion to his nation’s abandoned children through providing a home for abandoned and often disabled children lit a fire in Ivie that could only be quenched when he gave his life to Christ a year after beginning his project.
“I read about Pastor Lee in a Los Angeles Times article on June 20, 2011, all about a man in South Korea who had put a mailbox for abandoned babies in his church and cares for them. I thought it looks like the bunker of a man who had drawn a line in the sand and said, ‘No one dies here.’ I wanted to make the movie so no one would forget his work when the article faded.”
The initial short film evolved into a full-length documentary that is in the midst of special showings at theatres nationwide this week, including tonight and tomorrow. From there, the film already has a life scheduled for iTunes and other digital platforms.