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MURF THE SURF: JEWELS, JESUS AND MAYHEM IN THE USA: Episodes 1.1-1.4

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What You Need To Know:

MURF THE SURF: JEWELS, JESUS AND MAYHEM IN THE USA is a documentary miniseries on MGM+. The series discusses The Crime of the 20th Century when Jack Murphy, aka Murf the Surf, and other Miami Beach boys stole the Star of India sapphire from the Museum of Natural History in 1964. Before that, Murf left Southern California to become a surfing champion in Florida. The first episode contains many references foreshadowing Murf’s conversion, including his statement that “you don’t find God, He finds you,” and an evangelistic clip from a Billy Graham crusade. After serving time in prison for theft, and, then again for murder, Murf finds Jesus, writes a book and spends 26 years in prison ministry.

The MURF THE SURF documentary series is must-watch entertainment. It will touch your mind, heart and soul. However, because of the many discussions of violence, robbery, drugs, and so forth, caution is advised even though there’s no dramatized violence, and all of it is encased on a well-made documentary using pictures and film clips. MURF THE SURF will entertain and perhaps even transform you.

Content:

(BB, CCC, L, V, S, N, A, DD, MM):

Dominant Worldview and Other Worldview Content/Elements:
Moral worldview with extreme Christian elements about a criminal’s dramatic conversion to become an evangelist which is questioned by some saying he was just a con man, but he spent more than 26 years in ministry, with very overt evangelistic segments

Foul Language:
Five obscenities including the “f” word

Violence:
No on screen violence, but pictures of murdered girls, discussions of prison violence, discussions of shootouts, description of father’s violence toward Murf, so violence runs throughout the program without being overt, including a jewel robbery

Sex:
No overt sex, but discussions of parties without mentioning sex but mentioning lots of girls

Nudity:
Lots of upper male nudity in swimming, surfing, diving, and in prison

Alcohol Use:
References to alcohol use

Smoking and/or Drug Use and Abuse:
References to using drugs and selling drugs, especially in prison; and,

Miscellaneous Immorality:
Stealing, lying, con games, and all sorts of crookedness.

More Detail:

MURF THE SURF: JEWELS, JESUS AND MAYHEM IN THE USA is a documentary miniseries on MGM+ about a surfer celebrity in the 1960s who became a jewel thief and perhaps a murderer. MURF THE SURF is one of the most exciting documentaries in memory. Some of the episodes move so fast with so much jeopardy that you hardly notice the time passing. This is rare for a documentary.

The first episode, “The Heist”, is about The Crime of the 20th Century when Jack Murphy, aka Murf the Surf, and other Miami Beach boy friends stole the extraordinary Star of India sapphire from the Museum of Natural History in 1964. With most of the international news and political news being very depressing, the story of these beach boys committing the biggest robbery of all time made them celebrities and a constant news item. The first episode contains many references foreshadowing Murf’s conversion, including his statement that “you don’t find God, He finds you”, and an evangelistic clip from a televised Billy Graham crusade.

The program has a brief overview of his childhood, where his father was always hard on him, even when he excelled in almost everything, including a violin concert where his father told him he made one mistake. Of course, this background sets up his character development as someone who always wanted attention that he didn’t get at home.

Murf grew up in Carlsbad, Calif., a beautiful town on the Pacific Ocean which at that time only had 1500 people. So, he was surfing at a young age. Although his father was mean spirited, one day he walked into his house and his father was watching Billy Graham. His father said to him, “There’s the greatest man in America”; thus, planting an admiration for ministry.

Trying to get away from his father, he moved to Miami, Fla., and won several Surfing Championships and even was entered into the Surfing Hall of Fame. Miami at that time was a magnet for handsome beach boys, beautiful young girls, big celebrities, and the Mafia. When the money started to run out, he and his beach boy friends became petty crooks, breaking into hotel rooms and houses. When things got a little hot, after stealing some expensive jewelry, they headed up to New York and stayed at a nice hotel overlooking the Museum of Natural History. They had a great party life in their penthouse suite and enjoyed New York, but eventually decided after touring the museum that they could rob it. Being athletes, they climbed over the fence, climbed up to the top floor and got into the jewelry collection to steal the Star of India.

They immediately returned to Miami, but the police eventually caught up with them, and they were sent to prison after much legal maneuvering. The public looking at these handsome Beach Boys thought of them as Robin Hoods, but they went to prison. Murf told his girlfriend, Bonnie, she should find another guy; so, tragically, she killed herself.

In Episode 2, called “Another Level of Madness”, Murf gets out of prison after 21 months, but his heart is a lot harder. He soon gets involved in a stolen securities scheme with two professional women and his beach boy friends. Eventually, when the women threaten to squeal, Murf and a friend and the two women go out on a boat ride up the bayous. The women are murdered in a gruesome way, heads crushed, shot, knifed in the stomach, and tied down to drown by concrete blocks. The police are quickly after them. Eventually, his excellent attorney alleges insanity, so Murf isn’t sent to the electric chair. Instead, as a result of several convictions, he gets a double life sentence plus 20 years in the worst prison in Florida, and it looks like the end of Murf. Even the public turns against him.

In Episode 3, entitled “God’s Business,” Murf, with his powerful personality, becomes a leader in the worst prison in Florida, becomes a drug dealer and engineers the only strike ever at a Florida prison, because the prison is overcrowded, the food is miserable, and life is Hell. Somehow Murf always dresses eloquently instead of the prison uniforms. While he’s committing crimes in prison, he’s appealing his sentence, claiming he didn’t do the murder, because he just drove the boat.

Soon, the state’s most powerful warden, Lewis Wainwright, is assigned to the prison. Lewis reads the riot act to Murf and commands Murf to listen to the preachers who have prison ministries, like Frank Constantino. Murf receives lots of letters. One tells him about Jonah, and he has a vision of crying out to God while drowning in his cell.

Episode 4, called “The Truth Bends”, explores Murf’s conversion, where he authors a book in a very short period of time about his conversion which becomes a prison best seller. Eventually, in 1984, he comes again before the parole board. Many people speak of his changed life, including Warden Wainwright. He gets paroled and spends the next 26 years in prison ministry. The question the program poses becomes even more poignant in this episode: Was Murf just running another con, or was he really saved by Jesus Christ? Because he never addressed the killing the two women in depth, even coming up with another story later in life, so he does not seem truly repentant.

The MURF THE SURF documentary series is must-watch television and streaming. It will touch your mind, your heart and your soul. The associate producer, Dom Fusco, was a friend of MG for many years and tried for years to produce a movie or televisions program about Murf. He took our filmmaking class, rewrote his script and got a two-picture deal with Ron Howard. This documentary series is the first of the two picture deal, and, if they make it into a movie, that will be the second. Because of the many discussions of violence, robbery, drugs, and so forth, caution is advised even though there’s no dramatized violence, and all of it is encased on a well-made documentary using pictures and film clips. MURF THE SURF will entertain you and perhaps even transform you.

Now more than ever we’re bombarded by darkness in media, movies, and TV. Movieguide® has fought back for almost 40 years, working within Hollywood to propel uplifting and positive content. We’re proud to say we’ve collaborated with some of the top industry players to influence and redeem entertainment for Jesus. Still, the most influential person in Hollywood is you. The viewer.

What you listen to, watch, and read has power. Movieguide® wants to give you the resources to empower the good and the beautiful. But we can’t do it alone. We need your support.

You can make a difference with as little as $7. It takes only a moment. If you can, consider supporting our ministry with a monthly gift. Thank you.

Movieguide® is a 501c3 and all donations are tax deductible.


Now more than ever we’re bombarded by darkness in media, movies, and TV. Movieguide® has fought back for almost 40 years, working within Hollywood to propel uplifting and positive content. We’re proud to say we’ve collaborated with some of the top industry players to influence and redeem entertainment for Jesus. Still, the most influential person in Hollywood is you. The viewer.

What you listen to, watch, and read has power. Movieguide® wants to give you the resources to empower the good and the beautiful. But we can’t do it alone. We need your support.

You can make a difference with as little as $7. It takes only a moment. If you can, consider supporting our ministry with a monthly gift. Thank you.

Movieguide® is a 501c3 and all donations are tax deductible.