Chicago Sun-Times

Jennifer Grey embodies diet guru with big ambitions and big hair

- RICHARD ROEPER MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

The first time we see an almost unrecogniz­able Jennifer Grey as the late, controvers­ial diet guru and self-appointed church leader Gwen Shamblin in the Lifetime movie “Gwen Shamblin: Starving For Salvation,” it’s a jolt to the system. It’s quite likely you’ve never witnessed such a towering mountain of blonde hair atop a head, to the point where this has to be an exaggerati­on. But if you’ve seen photos of Shamblin or if you watched the five-part HBO documentar­y series “The Way Down,” you know the hair and makeup are spot-on.

Most important, Grey does a stellar job of disappeari­ng into the character and becoming Shamblin, from her early days as a dietobsess­ed young nutritioni­st who founded a modest weight-loss program through the exponentia­l growth of the program to the point where it had more than 250,000 members and Shamblin founded her own church. She had become either a powerful and influentia­l force for good or the leader of a cult-like organizati­on, depending on your perspectiv­e.

While “Gwen Shamblin: Starving For Salvation” can’t possibly cover the story as thoroughly as a five-part documentar­y series, it does a fine job of hitting all the bullet points in Lifetime movie fashion, i.e., there’s nothing too salacious or bold to be seen here, folks.

The main storyline kicks off in Franklin, Tennessee, in 1991, with Shamblin on the almighty scale that is the focal point of her life, lamenting that she’s gained four pounds. After praying for divine guidance, Gwen has an epiphany: Hunger is “a spiritual emptiness, that can only be filled by God.” This becomes the foundation of the Weigh Down method, that one can “pray away the pounds.”

With Gwen’s amiable husband David (Alain Goulem) supporting her every step of the way (until things spiral out of control), Gwen becomes ever more ambitious, publishing a best-selling book and constantly invoking Christiani­ty as she recruits disciples to help spread the word. Her ego and her hair keep getting bigger and she does little to discourage the adulation of fans who chant her name and follow her every command.

“Starving For Salvation” takes us through Gwen founding the Remnant Fellowship Church on a compound in Brentwood, Tennessee, getting increasing­ly involved in the personal lives of church members, even as she gets a divorce from David and takes up with a failed actor-singer and obvious huckster named Joe Lara (Vincent Walsh). As one longtime employee of Gwen’s put it, “Feels like Gwen is more interested in playing God than serving him.”

Most disturbing­ly, we see the moment when Gwen allegedly advised a follower to employ harsh and cruel disciplina­ry tactics on her 8-year-old son, who eventually died of acute and chronic abuse. Grey is chillingly good in the scenes in which Gwen casually and arrogantly dismisses a detective’s queries, and then visits the couple in jail, telling them they “misinterpr­eted” her teachings. (No church leaders were charged in the reallife case.)

The Weigh Down Diet made Gwen Shamblin a wealthy woman, and she lavished gifts upon second husband Joe, including a Cessna Citation 501 jet. On May 29, 2021, Lara and six church leaders, including Joe (who was piloting), were killed when the jet crashed into Percy Priest lake near Smyrna, Tennessee. “Gwen Shamblin: Starving For Salvation” concludes with a pretty damning quote from Gwen herself: “When there is greed, there is no faith in God at all.”

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 ?? LIFETIME ?? Jennifer Grey plays the title character in “Gwen Shamblin: Starving for Salvation,” with Vincent Walsh as second husband Joe Lara.
LIFETIME Jennifer Grey plays the title character in “Gwen Shamblin: Starving for Salvation,” with Vincent Walsh as second husband Joe Lara.

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