The Lost Medallion: The Adventures of Billy Stone

The Lost Medallion: The Adventures of Billy Stone

Movie poster
Directed by Jaylen
Produced by JaylenDownes
Bobby Downes
Phillip Moses
Wych Kaosayananda
Michael Scott
Mark Burman
Jamie Muir
Written by Jaylen
Story by Jaylen
Starring Billy Unger
Sammi Hanratty
James Hong
Alex Kendrick
Mark Dacascos
Music by Marc Fantini
Steffan Fantini
Cinematography Brian Baugh
Edited by David de Vos
Phillip Moses
Bill Muir
Production
company
Distributed by Methinx Entertainment
Freestyle Releasing[1]
Release dates
  • March 1, 2013 (2013-03-01)
Running time
97 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $2.5 million
Box office $705,854[2]
The Lost Medallion: The Adventures of Billy Stone
Author Bill Muir
Country United States
Genre Children's, Fiction
Publisher Methinx Publishing
Publication date
3 January 2011
Pages 350
ISBN 0976526093

The Lost Medallion: The Adventures of Billy Stone is a Christian children's book and movie written by Bill Muir. The story revolves around Billy Stone (Billy Unger) and Allie (Sammi Hanratty) as amateur archaeologists who find a long lost medallion belonging to an ancient tribal king.[3][4]

Plot

The movie begins as Daniel Anderson (Alex Kendrick) arrives at a foster home, bringing donations. He is asked to tell a story to the children. He accepts and the movie transitions into the Lost Medallion universe.

The story begins in a flashback in which a man holding an item wrapped in cloth is running away from another man. The man digs a hole by a tree and buries a medallion. The movie flashes back to the present where Billy (Billy Unger) sneaks into his father's archaeology site and tries to help work. He is told to leave, so he goes swimming with his best friend Allie (Sammi Hanratty). When he goes back home, she gives him an old book. Billy is not a reader, so they read it together. They hear how the medallion was buried in a different spot than where his dad is looking. They go into the forest with Billy's home-made metal detector go searching. Two men from a rival archeology company have been watching them and bring their own metal detectors. The kids stumble on the goons and head off in a different direction. They hide behind a large tree. The detector goes off and they dig up the medallion.

The goons discover them and chase them through the city. After a bit, the kids, thinking they have lost the men, head back to Billy's home, only to find that the goons have arrived before them and tied up Billy's dad. Billy yells "I wish this whole mess had never happened!" and the medallion sends both Billy and Allie back in time (200 years).

The pair are captured and taken to a nearby village, where the village king (Jansen Panettiere), Huko, notices the medallion and claims that it is his. However, the people say that the king of the village is whoever wears the medallion; they hold a party for the new royalty. The party is interrupted by the arrival of an enemy force, led by the ancestors of the two goons they had met in the present. Everyone in the village is captured except for Billy, Allie, Huko, and Anui.

Later the group is cornered by a river. Allie is captured, but Billy agrees to exchange her for the medallion. After the exchange, the kids jump over a waterfall to avoid capture. The kids quarrel among themselves but decide to try and seek help from an old wise man, Faleaka (James Hong), in the mountains.

The wise man tells them that they must complete tasks, and in return he will teach them how to defeat Cobra, the enemy that attacked the camp, and the evil warlord who keeps the natives in terror, and get the medallion back. The kids travel to the island of Cobra. On the beach of Cobra's island, Faleaka is shot by an arrow and killed.

The kids continue trying to get Cobra, but are captured; this time they are sent to a prison/work camp, and Billy is locked up in a cell. Billy escapes and meets the others in the camp. They use the tasks they learned from Faleaka to help everyone escape. Billy and Cobra have one last battle, and Cobra, along with the medallion, is pushed into a hellish pit.

The four friends get back together, and Billy and Allie accept that they are stuck in the past permanently, since the medallion is gone forever. However, Billy realizes that since they are in the past, he and Allie do not find the medallion for another 200 years. Thus, the medallion should still be buried. He goes to the place where he and Allie had discovered the medallion, and finds the medallion there, wrapped up. The jewel that belongs in the middle starts glowing, and is put in its rightful place in the medallion. Billy gives the medallion to Huko, who then activates the medallion to send Billy and Allie back to the present. Billy attacks the goons that had captured his father, only to have his father stop him, revealing that time has changed and the goons are no longer evil. The movie ends with Daniel expressing the story's message of God's love.[5][6][7]

Cast

Production

The film was shot in Bangkok, Kanchanaburi, and Krabi, in Thailand, in 2009, and the foster home scene was filmed in California at a later date.

After the film went through the US/Canada Film Festival circuit, many church-based investors invested in the film. With the investment some changes were made that changed how the movie is presented. A new opening and ending was created, with Alex Kendrick added to the cast, so that The Lost Medallion is now a story that Alex's character tells foster kids about God.

The movie opened in limited theaters nationwide on March 1, 2013.[8]

Video game

Retora Game Studios developed two mobile app games to accompany the film. The Lost Medallion game is an Angry Birds type game where the user swings Billy's slingshot to fill the hole of the medallion. The game contains 20 levels and stills from the movie.[9] The second is Billy's Adventure where the player has to move across a grid to avoid goons and dig up treasure.[10]

References

  1. "The Lost Medallion". Freestyle Releasing. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  2. The Lost Medallion at Box Office Mojo
  3. 'The Lost Medallion' Writer Bill Muir: Kids Need 'Wholesome, Entertaining' Films ChristianPost.com. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  4. Christian-Made Lost Medallion Fun but Confusing crosswalk.com. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  5. "The Lost Medallion" Review TheIndependentCritic.com. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
  6. Plugged In Movie Reviews: The Lost Medallion pluggedin.com. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  7. The Lost Medallion A Review of the Upcoming Film dadpad.org. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  8. The Lost Medallion: The Adventures of Billy Stone MovieTickets.com. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  9. "The Lost Medallion".
  10. "Billy's Adventure".
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