Exclusive Clip: Confessions of a Prodigal Son

Posted on March 11, 2015 at 10:00 am

We are proud to be able to share an exclusive clip from the new film Confessions of a Prodigal Son, starring Kevin Sorbo.

It is a modern retelling of the classic biblical story, premiering on DVD and Digital HD March 24, 2015 from Cinedigm.

Copyright 2015 Cinedigm
Copyright 2015 Cinedigm

Sean (Nathan Clarkson) is a rebel who leaves his home and family to reflect on self-discovery and suddenly finds himself questioning everything he once learned. He encounters a professor who challenges his thoughts and emotions, helping him realize that life is a story full of unexpected events, but no matter what happens, everyone has a second chance.

In addition to the Confessions of a Prodigal Son DVD and Digital HD release on March 24, Right Angle Music will distribute an album titled Confessions of a Prodigal Son (Music Inspired by the Motion Picture) on the same date, with Christian music inspired by the film by Window View, Ben Rector, New Song, and other artists.

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Christian Movie Madness Tournament

Posted on March 10, 2015 at 3:30 pm

ChristianCinema.com is hosting the First Annual Christian “Movie Madness” Tournament. Audiences can vote for their favorite films in a bracket-style tournament competition, based on basketball’s March Madness tournament. ChristianCinema.com hopes to promote great films and create industry-wide buzz about audience-favorite films. Voting is open now!

The tournament will have an industry-wide reach, across multiple genres. For the first few rounds of voting, movies will be divided into “conferences” based on theme: Faith and Theology, Bible Stories and Epics, Love and Romance, Comedy, Sports, Action/Adventure, Hot Social Topics, and True Stories. Fans can vote in a single head-to-head or continue clicking through to vote for multiple titles.

“With our uniquely designed website, we have made voting as simple as possible for fans. We want voters to have fun with the competition and share it,” says Geesey. Christian Cinema.com is also sweetening the pot for voters by offering an immediate discount on the purchase of any film in the Christian Movie Madness tournament. Voters can also be notified each week of the winners by email so that they can continue to vote and share as films make their way up the tournament bracket.

Tournament dates will be as follows:
Round 1 – Now through March 12
Round 2 – March 19
Sweet 16 – March 24
Elite 8 – March 28
Final 4 – March 31
Championship – April 2

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Interview: Ali Faulkner of “The Song”

Posted on February 13, 2015 at 3:28 pm

Ali Faulkner is in every way the heart of the new faith-based film, “The Song.” She plays Rose, who inspires the title song and marries the musician who wrote it for her. Unlike most films, this one does not end with the wedding — it is only after they get married that the story really begins, as their marriage is tested when her husband spends most of his time touring. We are honored to have an exclusive clip about the film to share.

I spoke to Ali about the challenges of playing a good person and how she helped to define her character with some important costume decisions.             

“When I first tried out, I definitely was intimidated because I first thought ‘this person is perfect and I’m far from that. How am I going to do her justice?’ But then I got some really good advice from an acting coach. He said, ‘Her name is Rose and every rose has a thorn.’ And that just really struck home with me and so it kind of gave me a little bit of freedom to know that even though this is an incredibly beautiful person, she still has her weaknesses and but of course no person sees their own weaknesses until something big happens. So I just tried to rely on the truth of who she was. I mean you can’t get round the fact that she’s a wonderful person but her flaws showed up naturally in the film and I just tried to be as true to that possible.” Writer/director Richard Ramsey reassured her not to be afraid to give Rose a lightness and sense of humor. “He was like ‘Don’t be afraid to let her be beautiful and shine in her own way and have fun. She doesn’t have to be matronly.’ That is something that you definitely wanted to shy away from because no young girl is going to relate to that.”

The story covers many years and several different stages in the relationship, but they shot out of order. Ali and co-star Alan Powell had to go backwards at times, from the complicated scenes of hurt and betrayal to the earlier scenes of easy intimacy. “It’s just about talking, recognizing where you are in the relationship and the physical stuff helped a lot. I tried to wear like bangs when she was younger and then have a more mature look when she was older. Naturally you’re just thinking about what they’ve been through at moment right before the scene and then that kind of helps. I wanted her to wear a lot of light colors because it just felt unnatural to have her wearing black. In fact the only time I really wanted her to wear black was at her dad’s funeral,that’s it. And even there was one part where she wears a little sash around her dress and it was originally black and I changed it to brown. I don’t know it is one of those things where she’s just such a light spirit that I couldn’t, I just couldn’t put her in dark colors so Rose wore a lot of creams and ivories that really looked and felt beautiful and sweet and conservative but still at the same time womanly in her own way.”

Ali’s first interest in performing was singing. “Singing was my first love and then I got into musical theater and really loved that and just fell in love with the acting side of it and about seven years ago I decided to get into the film world and I just loved it and haven’t a looked back since. I just feel like film gives such opportunity to create things that live on. Our human instinct is going to create thing that will live on in some way.” She is guided by the advice not to try in acting, but “to allow. If you are open enough you can really allow yourself to connect with certain characters but if you try too hard you kind of get in your own way. So that I think is the biggest challenge and struggle that I’m always working on and that I feel like is really important.” Her early inspirations included opera and big, epic films like “Gladiator.” “They seem to pull me into a world that just resonated so deeply and I love it so much. Those are the films that inspired me the most probably.” The movie she’d recommend for a date night is “Love Actually,” which she describes as uplifting and warm.

Ali hopes that the couples who watch this film learn that “no matter where they are in their life we see things in a different way. I just want to them to take away whatever touches them or what ever aspect of the film speaks to them in any sort of positive way. But specifically I guess that challenges can be overcome, that there is hope for relationships that have been broken. And that the beautiful thing that forgiveness is and that forgiveness can heal.”

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For the First Time at Sundance: A Panel on Faith and Films

Posted on January 28, 2015 at 3:37 pm

Copyright 2014 Paramount
Copyright 2014 Paramount

The acclaimed Sundance Film Festival, where ground-breaking films and indie favorites often premiere, will have its first-ever panel discussion of faith and films this week. “Hollywood reflects society, society reflects Hollywood, and each needs the other,” Tim Gray, founder and president of Gray Media said of unprecedented panel discussion. “Years in the making, this conversation will challenge storytellers’ notions of faith in films and inspire filmmakers to next levels.”

Copyright 2014 Sony Pictures
Copyright 2014 Sony Pictures

On January 29, 2015, the 4 p.m. panel will open in a one-on-one with Devon Franklin, now president/CEO of Franklin Entertainment. At MGM and as SVP of Columbia Pictures, Franklin produced “Pursuit of Happyness,” “The Karate Kid 2,” “Heaven is for Real,” and “Annie.” He is the author of Produced by Faith: Enjoy Real Success without Losing Your True Self.  This will be followed by a panel moderated by Gray, featuring Franklin along with Adam Hastings, Pure Flix Entertainment director of marketing and operations, whose 2014 “God’s Not Dead” earned more than $60 million domestic box office; Bill Reeves, founder of Working Title Agency, behind faith-market groundbreakers “Fireproof,” “Courageous,” “Soul Surfer,” “Heaven is for Real” and more; and Julie Fairchild of Lovell-Fairchild Communications, whose film work ranges from “Fireproof” to “Get Low,” “20 Feet from Stardom.” and “Heaven is for Real.”

This is an important step forward, and I hope it becomes an annual tradition — and, unless they want to change the name to “Some Sects of Christianity and Films,” that future panels include a broader range of faith traditions.

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Spiritual films Understanding Media and Pop Culture

On DVD This Week: Sacred Journeys

Posted on January 6, 2015 at 8:00 am

Sacred Journeys With Bruce Feiler comes out this week on DVD. If you missed it on PBS, here is your chance to travel along with pilgrims and worshippers around the world.

200 million people go on a pilgrimage each year. They set out from the ordinary, and seek the extraordinary.

Sacred Journeys takes viewers on some of the most celebrated, challenging and spectacular religious pilgrimages on earth. In this landmark six-part series, we travel with American pilgrims looking to transform their lives as they visit places deeply meaningful to their faith. And our cameras gain privileged access to places rarely seen by viewers before.

A pilgrimage at its core is a gesture of action. Pilgrims feel a deeper connection to their faith. They feel closer to God. In a world in which more and more things are digital and ephemeral, a sacred journey gives the pilgrim the chance to experience something real.

Pilgrimage today is more alive than ever before. But you can’t experience its wonders unless you go.

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