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8 October, 20118 October, 2011 1 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized

No other character has inspired as many movies as Jesus Christ has. Some are excellent (Ben Hur), some are mediocre (Nativity Story), some are terrible (The Greatest Story Ever Told), and some are just silly (Ultrachrist!).

We have compiled a list of 30 of some of the more notable titles in the Jesus movie genre.

 

Life and Passion of Jesus Christ (1905)

This silent film tells stories of Christ not as drama, but as a uniquely visual piece of art.


From the Manger to the Cross (1912)

The first Biblical epic to be filmed in the Holy Land.

 

King of Kings (1927)

During the filming, director Cecil B. Demille required all of his actors to sign legal documents preventing them from engaging in “sinful activity.”


Golgotha (1935)

This is the first direct portrayal of Christ is a sound film.

 

The Robe (1953)

A Roman tribune, assigned by Pilate to oversee the crucifixion, wins Jesus’ robe in a game of dice. The power of the robe turns the tribune into a true believer.

 

Ben Hur (1959)

Stands out above the campy, awkward, Biblical-inspired epics coming out of Hollywood at the time.

 

King of Kings (1961)

Robert Ryan is the best John the Baptist you’ll ever see.

 

The Gospel According to St. Matthew (1964)

Italian filmmaker Pasolini’s film is widely considered the masterpiece of the genre among critics.

 

The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965)

But not the greatest film ever made. Honestly, how could you cast John Wayne in a Biblical epic?

 

Godspell (1973)

One of three Jesus themed musicals released in 1973, the film is set in New York city and featured Jesus in clown makeup.

 

Jesus Christ Superstar (1973)

Hippy Jesus musical with words and music by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber.

 

The Gospel Road (1973)

Johnny Cash vehicle shot in Israel. His wife June Carter is cast as Mary Magdalene.

 

The Messiah (1975)

Roberto Rossellini’s subtle biopic downplays miracles and dramatic effects and emphasizes the brotherhood of men.

 

Jesus of Nazareth (1977)

At six and a half hours, this made-for-TV miniseries explores the Gospels in unprecedented depth. Some call this the best Jesus film.

 

Life of Brian (1979)

The Monty Python troupe asks the question: What if the three wise men visited the wrong manger? Hilarity ensues.

 

The Day Christ Died (1980)

Jim Bishop’s minute-by-minute account of the fateful day is the basis for this TV movie.

 

Hail Mary (1985)

This modern day parallel of the Jesus story was condemned by the Vatican. Reason enough to make this film a must-see.

 

The Last Temptation of Christ (1988)

Scorsese’s controversial adaptation of the novel, in which Jesus is very human and Judas is just following Christ’s orders.

 

Jesus of Montreal (1989)

A satire set in modern day Quebec, the film follows five actors as they put on a controversial passion play which and finds the life of the groups leader mirroring that of Jesus whom he plays in the film.

 

The Book of Life (1998)

In this satire, Jesus has been sent down to end the world by breaking the Seven Seals on a computer disk in a bowling alley locker room.

 

Mary, Mother of Jesus (1999)

Tells the Gospel story through the eyes of Jesus’ mother Mary. Christian Bale, who plays Christ, reportedly had nightmares after working on the film each day.

 

The Miracle Maker (2000)

This claymation feature length story of Jesus casts Ralph Fiennes in the title rol

 

Jesus (2000)

CBS mini-series with Gary Oldman as a Pontius Pilot.

 

Jesus Christ Vampire Hunter (2001)

Jesus returns for the second coming only to find the earth overrun by vampires. He teams up with a Mexican wrestler to make the world safe for judgment day. Oh, and it’s a musical!

 

Joshua (2002

What if Jesus returned to a small community in America? What would happen?

 

The Gospel of John (2003)

The screenplay is a verbatim transcript of the Good News translation of this Gospel—with no words added or subtracted.

 

Ultrachrist! (2003)

Jesus takes on the persona of a superhero in spandex; fights Jim Morrison, Dracula, Hitler, and Richard Nixon.

 

Passion of the Christ (2004)

Mel Gibson’s gore-fest is both heralded as divine revelation and hated as anti-Semitic and historically inaccurate.

 

Son of Man (2005)

Told as an African fable, it won Best feature at L.A. Pan African Film Festival.


Color of the Cross (2006)

Featuring a black Jesus, asks was the crucifixion racially motivated?

 

Nativity story (2006)

Faithful depiction of the Immaculate Conception and subsequent journey of Mary. There’s no crucifixion scene to ruin the happy ending.

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19 March, 201119 March, 2011 0 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized

This Bible will enrich your trust in God and give you powerful and compelling evidence, not only for the existence of God, but for the inspiration of Holy Scripture.

19 March, 201119 March, 2011 0 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized

Song by Larry Norman
covered by DC Talk.


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17 February, 201117 February, 2011 1 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized
Emily Pilloton wants to create things that aren't just well designed, but have a positive social impact. (05:35)
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3 February, 20103 February, 2010 0 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized

Adspecs from Joel on Vimeo.

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2 November, 20092 November, 2009 0 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized

Social Media Revolution: Is social media a fad? Or is it the biggest shift since the Industrial Revolution?

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23 October, 200923 October, 2009 0 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized

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23 October, 200923 October, 2009 0 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized

Seth Godin: Quieting the Lizard Brain from 99% on Vimeo.

"What you do for a living is not be creative, what you do is ship," says bestselling author Seth Godin, arguing that we must quiet our fearful "lizard brains" to avoid sabotaging projects just before we finally finish them.

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20 October, 200920 October, 2009 0 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized

Symphony of Science - 'We Are All Connected'

 


[deGrasse Tyson]
We are all connected;
To each other, biologically
To the earth, chemically
To the rest of the universe atomically

[Feynman]
I think nature's imagination
Is so much greater than man's
She's never going to let us relax

[Sagan]
We live in an in-between universe
Where things change all right
But according to patterns, rules,
Or as we call them, laws of nature

[Nye]
I'm this guy standing on a planet
Really I'm just a speck
Compared with a star, the planet is just another speck
To think about all of this
To think about the vast emptiness of space
There's billions and billions of stars
Billions and billions of specks

[Sagan]
The beauty of a living thing is not the atoms that go into it
But the way those atoms are put together
The cosmos is also within us
We're made of star stuff
We are a way for the cosmos to know itself

Across the sea of space
The stars are other suns
We have traveled this way before
And there is much to be learned

I find it elevating and exhilarating
To discover that we live in a universe
Which permits the evolution of molecular machines
As intricate and subtle as we

[deGrasse Tyson]
I know that the molecules in my body are traceable
To phenomena in the cosmos
That makes me want to grab people in the street
And say, have you heard this??

(Richard Feynman on hand drums and chanting)

[Feynman]
There's this tremendous mess
Of waves all over in space
Which is the light bouncing around the room
And going from one thing to the other

And it's all really there
But you gotta stop and think about it
About the complexity to really get the pleasure
And it's all really there
The inconceivable nature of nature

(Click to close lyrics)


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"We Are All Connected" was made from sampling The History Channel's Universe series, Carl Sagan's Cosmos, Richard Feynman's 1983 interviews, Neil deGrasse Tyson's cosmic sermon, and Bill Nye's Eyes of Nye Series, plus added visuals from The Elegant Universe (NOVA), Stephen Hawking's Universe, Cosmos and more.

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Carl Sagan - "A Glorious Dawn", featuring Stephen Hawking

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[Sagan]
If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch
You must first invent the universe

Space is filled with a network of wormholes
You might emerge somewhere else in space
Some when-else in time

The sky calls to us
If we do not destroy ourselves
We will one day venture to the stars

A still more glorious dawn awaits
Not a sunrise, but a galaxy rise
A morning filled with 400 billion suns
The rising of the milky way

The Cosmos is full beyond measure of elegant truths
Of exquisite interrelationships
Of the awesome machinery of nature

I believe our future depends powerfully
On how well we understand this cosmos
In which we float like a mote of dust
In the morning sky

But the brain does much more than just recollect
It inter-compares, it synthesizes, it analyzes
it generates abstractions

The simplest thought like the concept of the number one
Has an elaborate logical underpinning
The brain has it's own language
For testing the structure and consistency of the world

[Hawking]
For thousands of years
People have wondered about the universe
Did it stretch out forever
Or was there a limit

From the big bang to black holes
From dark matter to a possible big crunch
Our image of the universe today
Is full of strange sounding ideas

[Sagan]
How lucky we are to live in this time
The first moment in human history
When we are in fact visiting other worlds

The surface of the earth is the shore of the cosmic ocean
Recently we've waded a little way out
And the water seems inviting

(Click to close lyrics)
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"A Glorious Dawn" is crafted from sampling Carl Sagan's 1980 PBS Documentary Cosmos and Stephen Hawking's 1997 PBS cosmology documentary series Stephen Hawking's Universe. Cosmos is available to watch for free on Hulu, and many parts of Stephen Hawking's Universe can be found on Youtube and various other video sites online.

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19 October, 200919 October, 2009 0 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized

The World is Flat

January 26, 2009

In 1884, a humble English schoolteacher named Edwin Abbott Abbott published a modest little novella called Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions and inadvertently brought the concept of extra geometric dimensions out of the Ivory Tower and into the mainstream. Isaac Asimov once described the book as "The best introduction one can find into the manner of perceiving dimensions," and many a physicist and mathematician will tell you the tome is among their favorites. I first read it just out of college, and was immediately charmed.

Part science fiction, part satire (and a pointed commentary on Victorian social hierarchy and the Establishment's animosity towards revolutionary new ideas), Flatland takes place in a two-dimensional world inhabited by 2D circles, squares, rectangles and a variety of polygons. Our narrator is a nameless Square who dreams about a one-dimensional world (Lineland) where nobody believes that anything lies beyond their simple linear existence -- certainly not an entire world in two dimensions.

But then the little Square meets a three-dimensional Sphere, who tells him about Spaceland, existing just beyond the ken of Flatland's inhabitants. Seeing is believing, so the Sphere takes the little Square on a tour of Spaceland, literally broadening his horizons. Once back home, the Square tries to tell others about this brave new world, and is denounced and eventually imprisoned for his trouble. (There's also a dream sequence involving Pointland, inhabited by a single point who thinks the Square's attempts to talk to him are just his own thoughts -- solipsism personified.)

There have been several attempts to adapt the book to film, most recently via the animated short, Flatland: The Movie, featuring the voices of Martin Sheen, Kristen Bell, Michael York, and Tony Hale:

Flatland is not a Utopian society (it's awfully repressive intellectually, for starters), and all men (and women) are not created equal. Men are polygons, and the number of sides they have determines their social class -- triangles are the lowest of the low, while a circle is considered a perfect shape. Women are relegated to being comprised solely of lines. And since a line moving towards an observer invariably appears to be merely a point, women are required by law to sway back and forth so that the men can see them coming. Apparently there were some "accidents" where men in Flatland were stabbed to death by oncoming women. (Right. An "accident." Ahem. I'm just saying that maybe one of the bastards had it coming.)

Anyway, extra dimensions became all the rage, well into the 20th century, where the notion of a fourth (or more) dimension influenced major artists like Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dali. In fact, Dali's famous painting, "Crucifixion," depicts Christ nailed onto a four-dimensional hypercube as a cross; Dali subtitled the work "Corpus Hydrocubus."

Dali

Post-Einstein and his concept of a unified spacetime, of course, time is considered the fourth dimension, so when scientists in the early 20th century began contemplating extra dimensions, they spoke of the "fifth dimension" -- and beyond. But just as the 2D shapes in Flatland couldn't see Spaceland, we can't perceive the fifth dimension. Mathematicians and physicists wanted a solution to the conundrum, and a Swedish mathematician named Oskar Klein obliged in the 1920s by arguing that the fifth dimension could be so tiny -- curled up, or "compactified," into a tiny ball smaller than the Planck length -- that noy even atoms could pass into it.

Such so-called "Kaluza-Klein models" languished for a bit after that, until the 1970s, when string theorists adapted this extra-dimensional approach to unify all four fundamental forces (gravity, electromagnetism, strong and weak nuclear force) into a giant Theory of Everything. To get all those pieces to fit together in string theory requires a whopping nine dimensions of space and one dimension of time (ten spatial dimensions if we're talking about "M" theory). The extra dimensions are supposed to be "compactified," which is why we can't experience them directly.

So how do we know they're there? Well, we don't, any more than Abbott's plucky little Square knew Spaceland existed until he visited it. We have some very pretty math buttressing the argument, and while it's a long shot, it's possible that experiments at the Large Hadron Collider could provide evidence of extra dimensions. Seeing is still believing.

String theorists, fortunately, do not inhabit a repressive, willfully ignorant world like Flatland. They might take some heat from their more skeptical colleagues now and then, and in the last couple of years there's been a bit of a backlash. But their story has a happier ending than Abbot's little Square. They are free to openly explore radical new ideas, inspiring art, literature, theater and such in turn. Whether string theory turns out to be right, or is eventually replaced by a better model, the world is a richer place for it.

Photo: "Crucifixion (Corpus Hydrocubus)," Salvador Dali, 1954.

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