"God's Not Dead 2" is the follow-up to the huge 2014 box-office hit from the same studio that brought out similar Christian-themed movies like "Do You Believe" and "Faith of Our Fathers." These aren't Christian movies like, say, Mel Gibson's "Passion of the Christ," Carl Dreyer's "The Passion of Joan of Arc," or D.W. Griffith's massive epic "Intolerance." Those were films vibrating with faith that also had high and often visionary artistic value. But "Faith of Our Fathers," "Do You Believe," "God's Not Dead," and now "God's Not Dead 2" are cheaply and often shoddily made, and aimed at a specific demographic. The films are the ultimate in preaching to the choir. They're so rooted to this specific time and place in American evangelical Christianity that future generations, even Christian generations, might watch them and ask each other, "Wait ... can someone look up 'Duck Dynasty,' because it seems to have been very important to these people."