The Most Reluctant Convert
The Most Reluctant Convert: The Untold Story of C.S. Lewis is a 2021 biographical drama film that depicts the journey of British author Clive Staples Lewis from staunch atheism to Christian faith.[1][2]
Directed and co-written by Norman Stone, with screenplay by Max McLean, the film is an adaptation of McLean's one-man stage play C.S. Lewis On Stage: The Most Reluctant Convert, which premiered off-Broadway in 2017.[2][3] Max McLean stars as an elderly Lewis, narrating his early life marked by the death of his mother, service in World War I, and intellectual encounters at Oxford University that challenged his materialist worldview.[4][5]
The narrative emphasizes Lewis's friendships with figures such as J.R.R. Tolkien and Owen Barfield, whose discussions on myth, joy, and reason gradually eroded his skepticism, culminating in his self-described status as "the most reluctant convert in all England."[1][6] Released in limited theatrical distribution on November 3, 2021, by Trafalgar Releasing, the film received praise for its faithful portrayal of Lewis's intellectual conversion and McLean's performance, earning an 89% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from critics.[5][7] It highlights key autobiographical elements from Lewis's Surprised by Joy without fabricating events, focusing on causal influences like personal grief and philosophical debates rather than sensationalism.[4][8]
Synopsis and Content
Plot Summary
The film The Most Reluctant Convert: The Untold Story of C.S. Lewis depicts an elderly C.S. Lewis, portrayed by Max McLean, reflecting on his personal history in a one-man dramatic monologue framed as a BBC broadcast from 1963. Lewis narrates his early life in Belfast, Ireland, including the profound loss of his mother, Florence Augusta Lewis, to cancer on April 15, 1908, when he was nine years old, which severed his emotional ties to organized religion and deepened his sense of isolation from his father, Albert Lewis.[9] This event prompts his reluctant enrollment in English boarding schools, where he endures harsh conditions and develops a worldview shaped by disillusionment with authority and early encounters with mythology that evoke fleeting sensations of transcendent "Joy."[10] Lewis recounts his intellectual radicalization during World War I service, where he forms a pact with fellow soldier Paddy Moore to care for each other's families if one dies; Moore perishes in 1918, binding Lewis to support Moore's mother, Janie King Moore, whom he later accommodates in a complex, quasi-maternal relationship marked by financial and emotional strain. Post-war, at University College, Oxford, under the tutelage of rationalist William T. Kirkpatrick from 1914 onward, Lewis embraces materialist atheism, rejecting theism as "nonsense" and experimenting briefly with occult practices alongside collaborator Arthur Greeves.[9][10] He details authoring works defending materialism while grappling with persistent "Joy"—an inconsolable longing he attributes not to desire but to objective reality pointing beyond the material world.[11] The narrative culminates in Lewis's Oxford fellowship and encounters with J.R.R. Tolkien and the Inklings group starting in the late 1920s, whose literary and philosophical dialogues erode his atheism; pivotal moments include a 1929 motorcycle ride during which he concedes the existence of a divine "someone or something," transitioning to theism, followed by full Christian conversion by September 1931 after recognizing the story of Christ as myth become fact. Lewis frames this as involuntary submission, dubbing himself "the most reluctant convert in all England," compelled by cumulative evidence from reason, nature, and personal longing rather than emotional appeal.[10][9] The monologue interweaves archival footage, dramatized vignettes of youth, and Lewis's wartime illustrations to illustrate these shifts, emphasizing causal influences like loss, intellectual rigor, and relational bonds over mystical revelation.[11]Key Events from Lewis's Life Depicted
The production portrays C.S. Lewis's childhood in Belfast as initially joyful, centered on imaginative play and family life, before being shattered by his mother Flora's death from cancer on August 23, 1908, when Lewis was nine years old, an event that instilled profound grief and doubt in him.[12] This loss is shown as catalyzing a strained home environment under his father's influence, fostering Lewis's early rejection of religious comfort and inclination toward rationalism.[12] Lewis's wartime experiences are depicted through his enlistment in the British Army and deployment to the trenches in France in September 1917 at age 18, where he served with the Somerset Light Infantry amid the brutal conditions of World War I, including artillery barrages and camaraderie with fellow soldier Paddy Moore, whose death further hardened his materialistic atheism by highlighting human suffering without divine purpose.[12] [13] Wounded by shrapnel in April 1918 near Lille, Lewis's frontline ordeals reinforce his view of the universe as indifferent or malevolent, solidifying his commitment to atheism upon returning to Oxford.[12] At Oxford University, where Lewis tutored as a young atheist scholar in the 1920s, the narrative illustrates his intellectual arrogance, promotion of materialism, and experimentation with occult practices like theism's rejection through rational arguments, while dismissing Christianity as myth.[12] [13] Key influences emerge via readings such as George MacDonald's Phantastes (1894), which stirred a sense of "holy" longing or sehnsucht, and G.K. Chesterton's The Everlasting Man (1925), challenging his worldview, alongside debates with Christian friends.[12] Friendships, particularly with J.R.R. Tolkien, are highlighted in scenes at Oxford's Eagle and Child pub, home of the Inklings group starting in the 1930s, where discussions on myth, truth, and Christianity—such as Tolkien's argument that the Gospel fulfills mythic patterns—erode Lewis's resistance during late-night walks like the pivotal Addison's Walk conversation on September 19, 1931.[13] [12] The climax depicts Lewis's conversion in two stages: first to theism in Trinity Term 1929, admitting "God was God" and kneeling reluctantly in his room, followed by acceptance of Christ as historical truth by September 1931, after which he proclaimed himself "the most dejected and reluctant convert in all England," marking a shift from self-focused scrutiny to faith-driven purpose.[12] [13]Historical and Biographical Fidelity
Accuracy to Lewis's Autobiography
The play C.S. Lewis Onstage: The Most Reluctant Convert, adapted by Max McLean, adheres closely to the factual sequence and intellectual progression detailed in Lewis's 1955 autobiography Surprised by Joy: The Shape of My Early Life, which chronicles his path from childhood theism through adolescent atheism to adult Christian conversion in September 1931. McLean explicitly drew the script "primarily from C.S. Lewis' autobiography Surprised by Joy, along with many other sources," structuring the narrative around Lewis's self-described stages: an initial "Joy" (Sehnsucht or inconsolable longing) from early reading and mythology, disrupted by his mother's death from cancer on August 23, 1908, at age 9; subsequent immersion in materialism and occultism during his time at Malvern College (1913–1914); and wartime atheism solidified by trench experiences in World War I.[14][15] Key turning points in the autobiography, such as Lewis's reluctant admission of theism ("I gave in, and admitted that God was God") during a motorcycle ride to Whipsnade Zoo in 1929, followed by his acceptance of Christianity as "a myth which is also a fact" two years later, are faithfully dramatized without alteration to dates or causal attributions. The production incorporates verbatim or near-verbatim excerpts from Surprised by Joy, including Lewis's reflections on influences like George MacDonald's Phantastes (read in 1916, which "baptised" his imagination) and debates with J.R.R. Tolkien and Hugo Dyson on November 14, 1931, that precipitated his full conversion.[16][17] McLean's portrayal emphasizes Lewis's emphasis on rational argumentation over emotional appeal, mirroring the autobiography's focus on "undiluted" reason in yielding to "the weight of the evidence."[15] While the one-man format condenses ancillary details—such as Lewis's fraught relationship with his father Albert or early friendships beyond Arthur Greeves—for dramatic pacing, it avoids introducing unsubstantiated events or reinterpreting Lewis's causal realism, such as his rejection of chronological snobbery (the assumption that modern ideas are inherently superior). Reviews from Lewis scholars affirm this fidelity, noting the script's reliance on primary texts without "hagiographic" embellishments that might contradict Lewis's self-critical tone in admitting his "stubborn" resistance.[18] The 2021 film adaptation retains this structure, using archival Oxford settings to visually reinforce autobiographical locales like Magdalen College, where Lewis tutored from 1925 onward.[16]Omissions and Interpretations
The production of The Most Reluctant Convert draws primarily from C.S. Lewis's spiritual autobiography Surprised by Joy (1955), which chronicles his progression from atheism to theism and eventual embrace of Christianity between 1929 and 1931, but it omits extensive elements of his broader biography to maintain narrative focus on the conversion process.[9] This includes scant coverage of Lewis's traumatic experiences at English boarding schools, such as Wynyard and Malvern, where he endured physical abuse and emotional isolation that shaped his early worldview but are not central to his faith journey as recounted in the source text.[19] Similarly excluded are his World War I service details beyond a brief mention of trench warfare's impact, his development as a literary scholar and author of works like The Chronicles of Narnia, his involvement with the Inklings literary group, and his later marriage to Joy Davidman in 1956, which occurred well after the events depicted.[19] These omissions serve the one-man play's structure, adapted into a 73-minute film, prioritizing intellectual and emotional turmoil over chronological completeness.[20] Interpretations in the adaptation emphasize dramatized introspection through Max McLean's soliloquy-style performance, blending excerpts from Surprised by Joy with selections from Lewis's essays like those in The Weight of Glory (1949) to convey his philosophical wrestlings with "Joy"—an elusive longing he associated with divine longing—without fabricating events.[21] The screenplay interprets Lewis's 1931 conversion conversation with J.R.R. Tolkien and Hugo Dyson as pivotal, aligning with his autobiography's account of myth becoming fact, though it condenses the multi-day discussions into a more immediate dramatic climax.[9] A concluding scene portraying Lewis receiving the Eucharist symbolizes his full entry into Anglican Christianity, an interpretive flourish that extends beyond the autobiography's focus on intellectual capitulation ("I gave in, and admitted that God was God" for theism in 1929, followed by Christian commitment), potentially underscoring sacramental realism absent in Lewis's terse description of theism's arrival during a motorcycle ride to Whipsnade Zoo on September 28, 1929.[19] Critics note the subtitle "The Untold Story" as misleading, given its reliance on Lewis's own published memoir rather than newly revealed material, though no substantive alterations to verified events are evident.[19] This selective fidelity highlights causal elements like personal longing and rational argumentation in Lewis's deconversion from materialism, while sidelining extraneous biographical context.Cast and Performances
Max McLean as C.S. Lewis
Max McLean, founder of the Fellowship for Performing Arts, originated the role of C.S. Lewis in the one-man stage production C.S. Lewis Onstage: The Most Reluctant Convert, which he also wrote and has toured nationally since its debut.[22] In the 2021 film adaptation directed by Norman Stone, McLean reprises the part as the elder Lewis, serving as the narrative frame while younger versions are portrayed by Nicholas Ralph and Eddie Ray Martin to depict flashbacks.[2] His performance draws directly from Lewis's autobiography Surprised by Joy and other writings, reciting passages to convey the author's intellectual progression from atheism to theism.[23] McLean's portrayal emphasizes Lewis's Oxfordian accent, scholarly demeanor, and evolving emotional states, from youthful skepticism and grief over his mother's death to reluctant acceptance of Christianity on September 28, 1931, during a motorcycle ride to Whipsnade Zoo.[24] The 80-minute runtime allows for a monologue-style delivery interspersed with minimalistic staging in the film, highlighting Lewis's rhetorical precision and wit without dramatic embellishment.[25] Critics have noted McLean's ability to inhabit the character authentically, capturing the "hard-boiled atheist" phase through sharp debates with figures like J.R.R. Tolkien, while avoiding caricature in favor of introspective realism.[26] Reception of McLean's performance has been largely positive among audiences familiar with Lewis's works, with reviewers praising its fidelity to the source material and emotional depth, such as in evoking the "rigorous journey" of conversion.[6] Some critiques highlight the stage-to-film transition's occasional pacing issues in the monologue format, though McLean's veteran delivery—honed over years of touring, including a 15-week off-Broadway run ending May 21, 2017—maintains engagement.[27] His background as a performer of Lewis adaptations, including The Screwtape Letters, informs a portrayal grounded in textual accuracy rather than interpretive liberty.[28]Supporting Roles
Nicholas Ralph portrays the young adult C.S. Lewis in flashback sequences depicting his early academic years and intellectual formation at Oxford, drawing on his prior role as James Herriot in the PBS series All Creatures Great and Small.[2][26] His performance emphasizes Lewis's emerging atheism and wartime experiences, providing visual contrast to Max McLean's reflective narration.[29] Eddie Ray Martin plays the child C.S. Lewis, illustrating formative events such as the death of his mother Flora in 1908, which profoundly influenced Lewis's worldview and rejection of religious consolation.[2] This role underscores the biographical trauma detailed in Lewis's Surprised by Joy, with Martin's depiction conveying youthful vulnerability amid family loss.[17] Richard Harrington appears as Albert Lewis, C.S. Lewis's father, capturing the solicitor's stern demeanor and emotional distance following his wife's death, which strained relations with his sons.[2] Harrington's portrayal aligns with historical accounts of Albert's grief-driven parenting, contributing to the film's exploration of Lewis's early disillusionment.[30] Amy Alexander embodies Flora Lewis, the mother whose 1908 death from cancer at age 45 marked a pivotal loss, prompting Lewis's initial turn from faith.[2] Her brief role highlights the domestic warmth absent after her passing, as corroborated in Lewis's autobiographical reflections.[1] Additional supporting actors, including Tom Glenister, David Shields, and Hubert Burton, fill ensemble roles representing figures from Lewis's Oxford circle and military service, though specific assignments like potential portrayals of brother Warnie or mentor Mrs. Moore remain uncredited in principal listings.[31] These performances collectively flesh out the one-man play's adaptation, enabling cinematic reenactments of causal events in Lewis's conversion without overshadowing the central monologue.[32]Production Process
Development and Adaptation
Max McLean, founder of the Fellowship for Performing Arts, conceived and wrote the one-man stage play C.S. Lewis On Stage: The Most Reluctant Convert as an adaptation primarily drawn from C.S. Lewis's 1955 autobiography Surprised by Joy, which chronicles Lewis's progression from atheism through theism to Christian belief via intellectual confrontations with figures like J.R.R. Tolkien and personal existential struggles.[33] McLean, who performs as Lewis, structured the script to emphasize Lewis's self-described reluctance, incorporating direct quotations and narrative elements from the book to depict key events such as his World War I service, Oxford friendships, and the "weight of glory" realization leading to his conversion on September 28, 1931.[34] Produced by the Fellowship for Performing Arts—a nonprofit dedicated to theatrical explorations of Christian themes—the play debuted off-Broadway and entered a touring phase, accumulating over 500 performances across U.S. theaters, universities, and churches by the late 2010s, refining McLean's portrayal through audience feedback and iterative scripting to balance philosophical exposition with dramatic tension.[22] The production's minimalist staging, relying on McLean's solo performance with projected imagery and period props, prioritized fidelity to Lewis's first-person reflections over embellishment, avoiding speculative dialogue to maintain biographical integrity.[24] For the film adaptation, McLean expanded the stage work into The Most Reluctant Convert: The Untold Story of C.S. Lewis, directed by Norman Stone and released theatrically on November 3, 2021, as a one-night event before limited expansion.[35] This version re-imagines the narrative with a multi-actor ensemble portraying younger Lewis and supporting characters like Tolkien, shifting from theatrical monologue to cinematic scenes filmed over three weeks in Oxfordshire locations including The Kilns (Lewis's home) and Magdalen College, involving 10-hour daily shoots with repeated takes for visual authenticity.[36] McLean retained core script elements from Surprised by Joy while adding visual metaphors—such as archival-style flashbacks and natural lighting to evoke 1920s-1930s England—to enhance accessibility without altering Lewis's documented timeline or causal sequence of doubts yielding to theistic arguments.[24] The adaptation process prioritized empirical alignment with Lewis's writings, consulting secondary sources like letters for contextual accuracy, though it omits broader biographical details post-conversion to focus solely on the titular reluctance.[34]Funding and Backers
The film The Most Reluctant Convert was produced and independently financed by the Fellowship for Performing Arts (FPA), a New York City-based not-for-profit organization founded in 1999 by actor Max McLean to create theater and film works informed by a Christian worldview.[37][38] FPA, which had previously adapted C.S. Lewis's writings for the stage—including the original one-man play C.S. Lewis Onstage: The Most Reluctant Convert in 2007—extended its mission to cinema with this project, marking its first feature film production released in 2021.[22] Funding was secured through FPA's internal resources and contributions from its "Fellowship Circle," a dedicated group of donors comprising individuals and supporters who provided the necessary financial backing to bring the adaptation to screen, including principal photography in the United Kingdom during late 2020.[30] These backers, aligned with FPA's ethos of promoting narratives rooted in Christian themes, enabled the low-budget production without reliance on major Hollywood studios or commercial investors, reflecting the organization's model of donor-driven support for faith-oriented content.[38] No public disclosure of specific donor names or exact funding amounts has been made, consistent with FPA's operations as a 501(c)(3) entity reliant on private philanthropy rather than grants or equity financing. This donor-centric approach allowed FPA to maintain creative control, prioritizing fidelity to Lewis's autobiographical writings over broader market appeals, though it limited the film's initial distribution to event-based theatrical releases via partners like Trafalgar Releasing.[39]Filming and Locations
Principal photography for The Most Reluctant Convert occurred primarily in the United Kingdom during the fall of 2020, with production wrapping on December 9, 2020.[39] The shoot capitalized on opportunities in England following delays from the COVID-19 pandemic, allowing for on-location filming at sites tied to C.S. Lewis's life.[35] Filming took place across approximately 18 locations in and around Oxford, England, where Lewis served as a tutor and professor at institutions like Magdalen College.[40] [41] Key scenes were captured at Magdalen College itself, with the production team arriving on set as early as 8:30 a.m. after actors underwent wardrobe and makeup preparations starting at 7 a.m.[35] Establishing shots were also filmed in London to provide broader contextual visuals.[2] This choice of authentic Oxford-area sites aimed to immerse viewers in the historical settings of Lewis's conversion, including university grounds and period-appropriate environs reflective of early 20th-century academia.[18] Directed by Norman Stone, the production emphasized natural lighting and real-world backdrops over extensive studio work, contributing to a runtime that interweaves reenactments with Lewis's own words from Surprised by Joy.[36] The use of these locations, numbering up to 20 in some accounts, supported the film's docudrama style by grounding biographical events in their geographic origins without relying on constructed sets.[42]Directorial Choices
Norman Stone directed The Most Reluctant Convert by adapting Max McLean's one-man stage play into a hybrid cinematic format, incorporating dramatic recreations with additional actors such as Nicholas Ralph portraying a young C.S. Lewis, while retaining the introspective monologue as the narrative core.[9] This choice preserved the play's emphasis on Lewis's personal reflections from his autobiography Surprised by Joy, allowing Stone to blend theatrical direct address with visual storytelling to depict key events like Lewis's World War I experiences and Oxford friendships.[43] A central directorial decision was the deliberate breaking of the fourth wall, with McLean's older Lewis character speaking directly to the audience at the film's beginning and end, framing the biography as a confessional recounting rather than a conventional linear plot.[44] Stone's approach here drew from the stage production's intimacy, using this technique to immerse viewers in Lewis's intellectual evolution from atheism to theism, prioritizing emotional authenticity over cinematic detachment.[45] For visual fidelity, Stone selected authentic locations including Belfast, Lewis's birthplace, and Oxford University settings to ground the narrative in historical context, avoiding studio-bound artificiality.[46] Cinematography focused on restrained, evocative shots—employing natural lighting and period-accurate details in costumes and sets—to underscore the quiet causality of Lewis's conversion, influenced by personal losses and philosophical debates with J.R.R. Tolkien, rather than sensationalism.[47] Stone's overall style reflects a commitment to factual dramatization informed by extensive research into Lewis's life, eschewing speculative embellishments in favor of evidence-based scenes that highlight causal factors like wartime trauma and academic influences.[43] This measured pacing and faith-informed lens, consistent with Stone's prior Lewis adaptation Shadowlands, aimed to convey the reluctant nature of Lewis's theistic turn without overt proselytizing, allowing the subject's own words and actions to drive the portrayal.[48]Release and Commercial Performance
Theatrical Distribution
The film was initially distributed as a limited theatrical event in the United States, premiering on November 3, 2021, in over 400 theaters across North America as a one-night-only screening.[49] [30] The distribution was handled by Trafalgar Releasing in association with Fellowship for Performing Arts, targeting major markets including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Dallas.[50] [51] Following strong initial attendance, with over $1.2 million in box office earnings from the opening night, the release was extended nationwide through November 18, 2021, adding further showings in U.S. theaters.[49] [52] International expansion included special event screenings in cinemas across the United Kingdom starting November 7, 2021, and in Canada, coordinated through Trafalgar's network for inspirational and faith-based content.[50] [53] Tickets were available via participating theater box offices and online platforms, emphasizing event-style presentation to audiences interested in C.S. Lewis's biography.[50]Home Media and Streaming
The film became available for digital purchase and rental on video-on-demand platforms, including Apple TV and Google Play, starting April 20, 2022.[54] Physical home media releases followed shortly after, with DVD and Blu-ray editions distributed by Vision Video on April 22, 2022.[55] These formats emphasized high-definition presentations of the one-man stage adaptation, featuring Max McLean's performance alongside archival footage and dramatizations of C.S. Lewis's life.[56] Streaming options expanded to subscription services such as Amazon Prime Video, where it has been accessible since at least June 2022, alongside fuboTV and Pure Flix.[57][58] Availability on these platforms supports on-demand viewing without additional rental fees for subscribers, though it remains absent from major competitors like Netflix or Disney+.[58] By late 2025, digital and physical copies continue to be offered through retailers like Amazon, with no reported shifts to exclusive streaming deals.[59]Box Office and Sales Data
The film achieved a worldwide box office gross of $3,080,877, comprising $3,032,744 domestically and $48,133 internationally, primarily from the United Kingdom.[60] Its limited theatrical release began with a one-night event on November 3, 2021, across over 400 North American theaters, generating $1.205 million and marking the highest per-screen average for that day.[49] This initial success prompted an extension of screenings through mid-November, contributing to the overall domestic total exceeding $3 million.[54]| Market | Gross | Share of Worldwide |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic | $3,032,744 | 98.4% |
| International | $48,133 | 1.6% |
| Worldwide | $3,080,877 | 100% |