Recommended: The Way Down on HBO Max
What's The Way Down About?
After she creates a massively successful Christian diet program called The Weigh Down, Gwen Shamblin founds a church called The Remnant Fellowship in Nashville, Tennessee. As the church grows and scandals accrue, many former members accuse it of being a cult, with Shamblin as the iron-fisted leader. This documentary series explores their experiences, as well as the aftermath of Shamblin's death in a plane crash in May 2021.
Who's involved?
Why (and to whom) do we recommend it?
When its first three episodes debuted in September 2021, The Way Down felt like a solid if familiar entry in the growing canon of streaming documentaries about cults. Shamblin herself is an irresistible subject, considering that she (a) was the rare woman to lead a Southern megachurch, (b) attained this empire on the back of a diet fad, and (c) teased her hair so high that one might have climbed it to the gates of heaven itself. If the details of Remnant's cult-like behavior are somewhat predictable — hoarding power and money, alienating people from their families, threatening legal action against dissenters — it's only because cults tend to follow sadly predictable patterns as they destroy people's lives.
But just a few months before it premiered, the doc was forced into new territory when Shamblin and six other people, including her husband, died in a plane crash. Faced with the implosion of the empire they were chronicling, Zenovich and her team delayed the final two episodes until April 2022, which gave them time to conduct fresh interviews and generally survey the aftershocks of the loss. It also provided the chance to capture the public's response to the first part of the show.
The resulting final episodes are remarkably nuanced, given how quickly they were made. Former Remnant members process their disbelief on camera, and in some cases, reach out to people they'd left inside the church. Meanwhile, several people who saw the first part of the series come forward with their own testimonies, as well as some remarkable new evidence of how Shamblin tried to control the media's perception of her. Zenovich also takes care to include extensive audio and written statements that Remnant released after Shamblin's death.
Thanks to these collected voices, it feels like we're hearing from all sides as they try to comprehend the collapse of an era. Their shell-shocked fumbling for meaning reminds us that every castle is built on sand, which is just the type of uncertainty that cults insist they can cure.
Pairs well with
TOPICS: The Way Down, HBO Max, Gwen Shamblin Lara, Marina Zenovich