Strip Club Ministry Leader Reveals How Father Wounds Destroy Women and How God Rescues Them in Stunning New Documentary
New documentary He Calls Me Daughter reveals how broken father daughter relationships drive women into exploitation and how God heals them.
New Documentary Explores How Father Wounds Drive Women Into Strip Clubs and How God Heals Them
A powerful new documentary is shining a light on the devastating impact of broken father daughter relationships and the redemption found through faith in God.
"He Calls Me Daughter," directed by award winning filmmaker Rick Altizer, debuted in theaters nationwide March 17 through 18 via Fathom Entertainment. The film explores what counselors call the "father wound," the deep emotional damage caused by absent, abusive, or emotionally distant fathers and how that pain shapes a woman's identity, faith, and sense of worth.
At the heart of the documentary is Rachelle Starr, founder of Scarlet Hope, a ministry she launched in 2007 to serve women trapped in the adult entertainment industry. Scarlet Hope teams visit strip clubs weekly across the United States, bringing meals and the gospel to women working inside.
You can't heal from something you don't name.
Rachelle Starr said this about the unspoken wounds so many women carry from their fathers. Over nearly 19 years, Scarlet Hope has served approximately 2 million meals and walked alongside thousands of women seeking freedom.
Altizer, who previously directed "Show Me the Father" in 2021, said he felt called to tell women's stories about fatherhood.
I felt the Lord say, 'I want you to do this for women.'
The film features testimonies from prominent Christian voices including Alex Kendrick, comedian Chonda Pierce, physician Meg Meeker, and In N Out Burger CEO Lynsi Snyder. One featured story follows a woman named Priscilla who was mentored by Starr over several years through her journey out of the industry.
Altizer emphasized the film's core message: there is only one perfect Father and our true identity comes from God alone.
Scarlet Hope Ministry Brings Gospel Light Into the Darkest Places for Exploited Women

The documentary arrives at a critical moment. Across America, millions of women are trapped in cycles of exploitation, many driven there by the wounds of absent or abusive fathers. Scarlet Hope's model of showing up consistently with food, love, and the truth of Scripture has become a blueprint for frontline ministry in some of the darkest corners of society.
The Crusader's Opinion
This is what the Church is supposed to look like. Not hiding behind stained glass windows, but walking straight into strip clubs with hot meals and the Gospel. Rachelle Starr and her team at Scarlet Hope are doing what most congregations are too comfortable to even consider. The father wound is real. When earthly fathers abandon their daughters, the enemy fills that void with lies, exploitation, and destruction. But God, the perfect Father, is in the business of reclaiming His daughters from the pit. Every church in America should be watching this documentary and asking themselves: what are we doing to reach the lost in the places nobody else wants to go?
Take Action
- Visit hecallsmedaughter.org to find screenings of the documentary near you and share it with your church community.
- Support Scarlet Hope's frontline ministry to exploited women at scarlethope.org through donations or volunteering.
- Donate to www.TheShepherdsShield.org to support persecuted and vulnerable Christians worldwide.
- Start a conversation in your church about how your congregation can minister to women trapped in exploitation in your own city.
- If you or someone you know is struggling with father wounds, reach out to a Christian counselor. The National Christian Counselors Association can help: ncca.org.