
I Believe
Summary
"I Believe" unfurls a somber yet profoundly inquisitive theological drama, delving into the very essence of human spiritual being. At its core is a student of divinity, tragically snatched from life's embrace, only to be inexplicably resurrected. This miraculous return, however, is shadowed by a chilling void: the man, though physically animate and intellectually intact, is bereft of his soul, a spiritual lacuna that renders him a walking philosophical paradox. His existence becomes a testament to an unseen absence, a disturbing anomaly that challenges the tenets of faith and the boundaries of scientific comprehension. It is through the collective, fervent intercession of prayer—a spiritual crucible forged by the desperate pleas of those who care—that this ethereal emptiness is finally mended. His soul, a divine spark presumed extinguished, is miraculously rekindled, transforming him from a living embodiment of spiritual desolation back into a complete, sentient being, thus affirming the potent, transformative power of communal belief and divine grace. The narrative meticulously dissects the implications of such a spiritual resurrection, probing the definitions of life, consciousness, and the sacred architecture of the human spirit.
Synopsis
A student of divinity who is brought back to life is found to have no soul but has it given back to him as a result of prayer.
Director
Kitty Cavendish, Frank Stanmore, Barbara Everest, Bertram Burleigh, Kenelm Foss, Edward O'Neill, Edna Flugrath, Charles Rock, Milton Rosmer, Hubert Willis, Lewis Gilbert












