[The following is a paid advertisement from Pointless Lives Atheist Productions. The views presented do not necessarily reflect those of Zoo Knudsen or of Knudsen's News.]
Atheist child Ratchet McCoy, played by militant evangelical Christian child Clank Burberry, shown here prior to realizing the utter uselessness of his dreams of a better life |
The Valley is a new atheist movie starring Glance Hudson. It tells the true story of Ratchet McCoy, a healthy child raised by atheists to never see any purpose in life but who nevertheless dreamed of being an astronaut for a few months before accepting the random and pointless nature of existence as the only true reality. Ratchet's father (played by Glance Hudson) was a doctor who struggled to understand why it even mattered if Ratchet followed his brief passion for exploring space, or if his patients' lived or died.
It's a powerfully soulless story that atheist families will watch! According to director Randy Watson, this is a movie that people will recommend to other people when they feel pretty sure that they are also atheists. "I set out to make an iconic atheist film in the classic sense, and one that will stand the test of time like Christmas Ends Tonight! and Fast and the Furious 16: Parking Lot Shenanigans."
The Valley is in theaters today! Sneak preview screenings start tonight, Monday the 4th, and the big opening is tomorrow (Tuesday, September 5th). Please support this atheist movie by seeing it in theaters and mentioning it to your friends and family, not that anything matters because all of this will one day be engulfed by the plasmic death throes of a dying Sun.
What are people saying about The Valley?
"May her fierce spirit guard the foals of spring whilst they pray for the souls of whoever made this abomination of a film, but the sound editing was really well done. Just top notch stuff from a very professional team."
- Pastor Check Wallace of the Universalist Congregation of Grebian Fundamentalism
"The characters really were played well, especially the father and Ratchet himself. I could relate to Ratchet needing to learn that nothing matters and to ignore his desire to follow his pointless dreams, so that he could merely exist as a puppet controlled by random events without the burden of free will, and how we will all eventually serve as nourishment for bacteria and other decomposers."
- Gladys Keiser
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