Behind the Scenes With Charlton Heston and “The Ten Commandments”

Posted on March 16, 2016 at 6:26 pm

“The Ten Commandments” is coming back to theaters for two days only, March 20 and 23, 2016, in more than 650 cinemas nationwide. Truly, this is a film that must be seen on the big screen to experience the epic scope and grand vision of director Cecil B. DeMille and the towering performance of Charlton Heston as Moses. It was selected by movie fans as the greatest Biblical movie of all time in a survey by MovieTickets.com.

We are honored to be able to present these rare behind-the-scenes photos from the making of the film.

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Behind the Scenes Classic Epic/Historical Spiritual films

Exclusive Premiere Clip and Free Tickets: Easter Mysteries

Posted on March 16, 2016 at 5:03 pm

Tony Award-winner John O’Boyle has written a new musical, the Easter Mysteries, and it will be in theaters for one night only: March 22, 2016.  It features Broadway performers from Les Misérables, Mary Poppins, Porgy and Bess, Phantom of The Opera, and more, and is filled with the pageantry of the season.

I have tickets to give away for showings at the following theaters! Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with “Easter” in the subject line and let me know which city you want tickets for. I will pick winners at random on March 20, 2016

Lynnhaven 18 with IMAX
1001 LYNNHAVEN MALL LOOP
VIRGINIA BEACH
VA
Cinemark Egyptian 24 with XD
7000 ARUNDEL MILLS CIR
HANOVER
MD
Cinemark Chesapeake Square with XD
2413 CHESAPEAKE SQUARE RING RD
CHESAPEAKE
VA
Tinseltown Bristol
3004 LINDEN DR
BRISTOL
VA
Fairfax Towne Center
4110 W OX RD STE 12110
FAIRFAX
VA
Virginia Center 20
10091 JEB STUART PKWY
GLEN ALLEN
VA
Valley View Grande Stadium 16
4730 VALLEY VIEW BLVD NW
ROANOKE
VA
Westchester Common 16
361 PERIMETER DR
MIDLOTHIAN
VA
New River Valley 14
110 NEW RIVER RD
CHRISTIANSBURG
VA
Fredericksburg 14
3301 PLANK RD
FREDERICKSBURG
VA
Gallery Place 14
707 7TH ST NW
WASHINGTON
DC

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Contests and Giveaways Holidays Musical Spiritual films

Interview: John O’Boyle on the Easter Mysteries Musical

Posted on March 15, 2016 at 1:04 pm

Easter Mysteries is an original, musical theater production about Christ’s death and resurrection, seen through the lens of his disciples and followers.  It is the first Passion Play ever told from Peter’s perspective, with iconic biblical characters portrayed by an interracial cast.  It will be shown in theaters for a special one-night event on March 22, 2016.

Directed by Daniel Goldstein (2011 Broadway revival of Godspell) and brought to you from Tony Award®-winning producers and a veteran Broadway cast, this uplifting musical is a celebration that sheds a new light onto a historical story in human terms – ordinary people with hopes, dreams and fears, uncertain of what lies ahead. With music, libretto and lyrics by Tony Award®-winning producer, John O’Boyle, the breath-taking music is the connective tissue that builds bridges across a diversity of multiracial and religious expressions. This first-rate production offers audiences the chance to see, feel and hear real peoples’ experiences of this touchstone story of Western Civilization in a fresh and moving way.

Cinema audiences will also be treated to an exclusive interfaith panel discussion with prominent Jewish, Christian and Muslim leaders discussing the production and its ability to affect interfaith relations. This thoughtful discussion will help bridge the interfaith gap and connect the beliefs of major religious communities in thought-provoking ways. Panelists include:

– Sister Sanaa Nadim, Muslim Student Association Chaplain, State University of New York at Stonybrook
– Evangelist Joyce L. Rodgers, Founder and CEO of Primary Purpose Ministries, Inc.
– The Most Reverend John J. O’Hara, Auxiliary Bishop of New York
– Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, Executive Vice President, New York Board of Rabbis and co-host of “Religion on the Line” on WABC radio in NY
– Tony Suarez, Executive Vice President, National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference
– Fr. Brian McWeeney, Director of Interreligious and Ecumenical Affairs, Archdiocese of New York.

In an interview, Tony Award-winning Broadway producer John O’Boyle spoke about the special dynamic of a live performance and what the multi-ethnic cast brings to the story.

What was the first live theatrical performance you ever saw?

My mother took me to a live production of “Babes in Toyland” when I was 4 or 5.  I had a very fortunate upbringing in Evanston, Illinois in the 50’s in that we had creative dramatics as part of the curriculum in our elementary school from 3rd to 6th grade.  Plus our junior high in conjunction with Northwestern University mounted six shows a year for young people.  Of course this doesn’t exist anymore.

Why is it important that this story be told with the immediacy of a live performance?

There is a dynamic to a live performance that is different from a traditional movie.  Movies are usually shot out of sequence and not in front of an audience.  A live audience creates a spiritual dialogue with the cast, much like a congregation does with a celebrant.  Performing the work in sequence straight through in front of an audience allows the cast to build the emotional arcs in a very natural way.  I think this is one of the reasons that live performance on film is gaining popularity.

How do you want this event to bring about a deeper understanding of the crucifixion and resurrection?

In discussions with a wide variety of people about their understanding of the crucifixion and resurrection I have heard very personal comments.  This is true for active church goers as well as those no longer a member of any congregation.  I hope that I have told this familiar story in a fresh way that allows everyone to re-explore and deepen this experience.

What kind of research went into developing this project?

To start this project I reread the Gospels over and over.  Yet long before that, while studying at Lawrence University for a theater degree and Catholic University for an MFA in directing/playwriting, I became fascinated in religious drama and the medieval mystery and morality plays.  I was intrigued by the more modern attempts at Passion Plays including the Oberammergau Passion done every ten years and Tony Harrison’s Mystery Plays done at the National Theatre in London, which I saw.  All forms of Passions – music, film and novels – have always interested me.

What inspired you to create a musical theater re-telling of the Passion?

I would love to tell you I had a great vision, but like a lot of things that are unexpected and wonderful in my life, I simply stumbled into it.  I had a request from my church in Severna Park, Maryland to help them do something musically dramatic for Palm Sunday.  I ultimately analyzed the structure of Passions as the Stations of the Cross, and jumped in.

I wanted to de-iconize the disciples and make their faith journeys accessible.  Anchoring these people in the Judaism of their time, I tried to write a Passion that was not anti-Semitic.  That production, which ended right after the crucifixion, took on a life of its own and was repeated as a fund-raiser, invited to a large clergy conference, and then invited to and performed in an 11th century Norman church in Swansea, Wales.

Returning from Wales I wanted to write a second piece that tackled what happened after Jesus’ death — including the Ascension.  This second piece was not only performed at our church but also at the Episcopal Cathedral in Baltimore.

In 2013 these two one-acts, having been extensively rewritten, were fused together and became the Easter Mysteries performed at St. Clement’s in NYC during Holy Week.

How does the music help us understand the struggles and motivations of the characters?

Music helps the heart and soul transcend to places it could not go otherwise.  Music is a part of every worship service and it is at the center if some of our most moving art.  I hope it serves both purposes in this work.

What do you look for in casting a project like this one?

We wanted the cast to look like America so that everyone seeing it could see themselves in it.  We were blessed with an incredible level of talent and they have given truly exceptional performances.  It was wonderful to see how their widely diverse spiritual backgrounds unified into a very moving experience — for the actors and the audience.

What do you want families to talk about on the way home?

I would love for them to need to discuss their feelings surrounding the crucifixion and resurrection once they’ve seen and heard Easter Mysteries.  If people find they sense more deeply the love that surrounds us, I would be thrilled.  And I hope seeing the film inspires people to offer grace even to strangers around them.

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Holidays Spiritual films
Miracles from Heaven

Miracles from Heaven

Posted on March 15, 2016 at 10:11 am

B
Lowest Recommended Age: Middle School
MPAA Rating: Rated PG for thematic material, including accident and medical issues
Profanity: None
Alcohol/ Drugs: None
Violence/ Scariness: Serious illness and peril involving children, sad death (offscreen)
Diversity Issues: Diverse characters
Date Released to Theaters: March 16, 2016
Date Released to DVD: July 11, 2016
Amazon.com ASIN: B01D1U6V58
Copyright Sony Pictures Entertainment 2016
Copyright Sony Pictures Entertainment 2016

Christy Wilson Beam’s book title says it all: Miracles from Heaven: A Little Girl and Her Amazing Story of Healing. In the book, she tells the story of her daughter Annabel, critically ill with an incurable digestive disorder, who fell thirty feet from a tree branch. Incredibly, she was not injured. And even more incredibly, possibly even miraculously, she was cured.

All of this happens in the trailer, and the movie’s biggest challenge is that the entire story is not much more than that.

A happy, loving family is catapulted into crisis when their sweet-natured daughter becomes ill. It takes a long time to get the right diagnosis, and then it takes a long time to see the only doctor who may be able to help them. And then she gets sicker and sicker and the family is under more and more pressure. And then she climbs the tree and falls. The rest, despite the best efforts of the always-appealing Jennifer Garner, mostly seems like so much padding. So, so much padding.

Just to make sure we didn’t miss the title’s reminder of where miracles come from, we are told right at the beginning what a miracle is: not explainable by natural or scientific laws. And then we meet the Beam family, as adorable as the ray of sunlight of their name, living a life somewhere between a country song and a Hallmark commercial. Everyone is beautiful, loving, patient, and trusting in God. There are sun-dappled vistas and cute animals. They have a kindly preacher, played with warmth and good humor by John Carroll Lynch.

And then Annabel (a very sweet Kylie Rogers), the middle of their three daughters, gets sick. At first, doctors reassure them that it is a minor problem like lactose intolerance, but it turns out to be a major digestive disorder that distends her stomach and makes it impossible for her to eat.

They are told that there is just one doctor in Boston who may be able to help her, but he is so busy they cannot get an appointment. Desperate, Christy (Garner) brings Annabelle to Boston, goes to the doctor’s office, and begs for a chance to see him. While they wait, they meet a kind-hearted waitress (Queen Latifah in a role that verges on uncomfortably confined to quirky comic relief) who gives them a tour of the city (more padding), until they get a call that the doctor is available. Dr. Durko (an engaging Eugenio Derbez) has a great Patch Adams-style bedside manner, but his diagnosis is a heartbreaking one. Annabel is hospitalized, and shares a room with another very sick little girl, who is comforted by Annabel’s reassurance of God’s love and protection.

And then, back at home, Annabel climbs an old dead tree and falls 30 feet inside.

The most touching and inspiring part of the film is not the “miracle” cure of a fall that somehow caused no serious injuries and rebooted the part of Annabel’s brain that was not telling her digestive system how to work. It is when Christy thinks back and realizes how many miracles the family has experienced through kindness and compassion.

Parents should know that this film is about a very sick little girl and includes scenes of illness, with a sad (offscreen) death.

Family discussion: Why did some of the women in the congregation blame Christy? What tested the family’s faith most? Which moments of kindness meant the most to the family?

If you like this, try: “Heaven is for Real”

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Based on a book Based on a true story DVD/Blu-Ray Pick of the Week Illness, Medicine, and Health Care Spiritual films
Special Theatrical Showing of “The Ten Commandments”

Special Theatrical Showing of “The Ten Commandments”

Posted on March 14, 2016 at 8:00 am

Copyright 1956 Paramount
Copyright 1956 Paramount

Fathom Events and Turner Classic Movies will present Cecil B. DeMille’s classic “The Ten Commandments” in more than 650 theaters around the country on March 20 and March 23, providing a rare opportunity to see one of the highest-grossing and most popular movies of all time on the big screen.

There will be four showings only, at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. each day.


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Spiritual films
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