Daniel Sloss Hubris 2024 - Movies (Jan 12th)
The Room Next Door 2024 - Movies (Jan 12th)
Polar Opposites 2025 - Movies (Jan 12th)
Moon Maidens 2 2024 - Movies (Jan 12th)
Putin 2024 - Movies (Jan 12th)
The Last Showgirl 2024 - Movies (Jan 12th)
Behave 2024 - Movies (Jan 12th)
The Darkening Hour 2024 - Movies (Jan 12th)
The Death That Awaits 2024 - Movies (Jan 12th)
Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Watchmen Chapter II 2024 - Movies (Jan 12th)
The Gardener 2025 - Movies (Jan 11th)
Absolution 2024 - Movies (Jan 11th)
Bank of Dave 2 The Loan Ranger 2025 - Movies (Jan 11th)
A Complete Unknown 2024 - Movies (Jan 11th)
Engaged by Christmas 2024 - Movies (Jan 10th)
Apocalypse Z The Beginning of the End 2024 - Movies (Jan 10th)
Get Away 2024 - Movies (Jan 10th)
90 Day Pillow Talk Before the 90 Days - (Jan 13th)
Home Town - (Jan 13th)
90 Day Fiance- Before the 90 Days - (Jan 13th)
Homestead Rescue - (Jan 13th)
A Bite to Eat with Alice - (Jan 13th)
Very Scary People - (Jan 13th)
Countryfile - (Jan 13th)
GRAND SUMO Highlights - (Jan 13th)
Snapped - (Jan 13th)
The Sunday Show with Jonathan Capehart - (Jan 13th)
Grand Sumo Live - (Jan 12th)
Dancing on Ice - (Jan 12th)
Rich House, Poor House - (Jan 12th)
The Great Pottery Throw Down - (Jan 12th)
Sunday Brunch - (Jan 12th)
Saturday Kitchen Best Bites - (Jan 12th)
Alex Witt Reports - (Jan 12th)
Taskmaster - (Jan 12th)
Call the Midwife - (Jan 12th)
22 Kids and Counting - (Jan 12th)
As C. S. Lewis wrote Jesus Christ is either a liar, a lunatic or the Lord. Emilio Barrachina’s Christ is a lunatic and his Evangelists are liars, all including John. But the main problem with Barrachina’s premise is that there is no evidence from the time of Jesus to support his view. The incidents related in the movie all come from the imagination of the scriptwriter not from any sources truly extant from the lifetime of Christ. Christ was not a follower of John the Baptist nor was he a Nazarite. While Christ was executed for sedition the Gospels relate that it was his claiming to be a king that was the foundation for the accusation of his sedition against Caesar. Nowhere in any of the documents that we have on Christ from the Roman Empire or the Apostles is he portrayed as a violent revolutionary. The author claims that his story line repeats the events told in the canonical Gospels but in historical dress to let them acquire their full meaning, i.e., the personal meaning that the author wants them to have. No evidence is ever offered that this view is a true historical rendition. Fir instance, the has Pilate ordering the execution of John the Baptist as a revolutionary when we know from the Gospels that Herod himself ordered the execution and we have no other source by which to attribute this act to any other than Herod. The author also claims in his own synopsis of the movie that the name Iscariot literally means “supplier of arms” but no authority supports such a definition of the name Iscariot and the renditions they do support come nowhere near to identifying Iscariot as a person who sold arms to the revolutionaries or Zealots as they were termed in Christ’s time. To defend his narrative, the author feels that if he can defend minor points in his narrative he has adequately defended the major distortions in his movie. To this end he concludes his own synopsis by restating the word he puts in Pilate’s mouth that since in Roman Law, each offense had a clearly specified punishment, then there can be no doubt Jesus was executed for a clear crime of sedition. But nowhere can he show definitively that Christ ever called for revolution or rebellion. The only source the author uses are the Gospels themselves and these he twists and distorts out of all recognition. But I believe that here can be found the whole justification for the author’s narrative, since the Romans condemned Christ for sedition then he must have been guilty of just suck an act then all the author has to do is to cut, paste and make-up elements of Christ’s life into a pattern supporting his condemnation. This movie while well made lacks the narrative coherence found in the Gospels themselves and the exceptions it takes with the Gospel narratives without evidence leaves the Christ portrayed as closer to C. S. Lewis’ lunatic than the Christ of the Gospels. The movie’s progression is sometimes choppy and great chunks of Christ’s ministry are omitted without explanation. Ultimately, this re-tailoring of Christ’s life is no better and of no more interest than the Jeffersonian Gospel denuded of anything miraculous or supernatural or the Jesus Seminars’ cut and paste job to the same effect. The only difference is that instead of reducing Christ to a man of pleasing aphorisms, a human teacher of virtue, this movie reduces Christ to a deluded fraud, a violent revolutionary without any coherent message or purpose.
Controversy ensues when four business school students create and launch a new religion on campus.
A spiritual adventure film chronicling the discovery of ancient scrolls in the rainforests of Peru. The prophecy and its nine key insights predict a worldwide awakening, arising within all religious traditions, that moves humanity toward a deeper experience of spirituality.
Bobby Griffith was his mother's favorite son, the perfect all-American boy growing up under deeply religious influences in Walnut Creek, California. Bobby was also gay. Struggling with a conflict no one knew of, much less understood, Bobby finally came out to his family.
The true story of the 19th century Belgian priest, Father Damien, who volunteered to go to the island of Molokai, to console and care for the lepers.
14th-century Franciscan monk William of Baskerville and his young novice arrive at a conference to find that several monks have been murdered under mysterious circumstances. To solve the crimes, William must rise up against the Church's authority and fight the shadowy conspiracy of monastery monks using only his intelligence – which is considerable.
In 25 AD, Judah Ben-Hur, a Jew in ancient Judea, opposes the occupying Roman empire. Falsely accused by a Roman childhood friend-turned-overlord of trying to kill the Roman governor, he is put into slavery and his mother and sister are taken away as prisoners.
A radio astronomer receives the first extraterrestrial radio signal ever picked up on Earth. As the world powers scramble to decipher the message and decide upon a course of action, she must make some difficult decisions between her beliefs, the truth, and reality.
Through a grey blanket of clouds, we barely discern the contours of Mount Fuji, a volcano with many faces. 4,500 exceptional and diverse photographs from the past 150 years form the basis for Ascent. Made entirely with stills, it is a filmic experiment balancing between documentary and fiction, photography and film, where an English woman and her deceased Japanese partner, Hiroshi, lead the way. As Mount Fuji is climbed across geographical, temporal and cultural divides, the narrative unfolds, exploring unexpected paths.
Haridas (Thyagaraja Bhagavathar) is a vain individual who spends his life in luxury and lust ignoring his wife (Vasanthakokilam). But when his wealth is appropriated by a courtesan (T. R. Rajakumari), he realizes life's realities, reforms and spends the rest of his days serving his parents and God.
In Depression-era West Virginia, a serial-killing preacher hunts two young children who know the whereabouts of a stash of money.
Maria is somewhat of a rebel and problem child. Her mother died and her father remarried some awful lady, and Maria isn't happy at all. She takes a drug overdose and winds up in a home for other girls with problems, but the two women who run the place turn out to be not quite the ladies they seemed. Maria knows she can't stay there very long, and starts planning her escape.