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Jesus Camp
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The youngest foot soldiers for the Lord are shown in their native environment in this documentary. Becky Fisher is a children's pastor who runs "Kids on Fire," a summer camp for evangelical Christian children in North Dakota. Fisher believes in the political and moral importance of a Christian presence in America, and uses her camp to reinforce the religious training most of her charges are already receiving at home (the majority of the campers are home-schooled by their parents). Using video games, animated videos, and group activities to help put her message across, Fisher encourages the kids to pray for George W. Bush and his Supreme Court appointees while urging them to help "take back America for Christ." For the most part, the children seem reasonably ordinary beyond the fact they pray with uncommon fervor and sometimes speak in tongues. Along with Fisher and her cohorts, Jesus Camp features interviews with Ted Haggard, an evangelist and advisor to George W. Bush, and Mike Papantonio, a Christian talk show host who believes the right-wing slant of many Christian evangelists is taking the church into a dangerous direction. Jesus Camp was directed by Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, who previously made the acclaimed The Boys of Baraka. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Jesus Camp (2006, USA, Heidi Ew ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
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"Going to Jesus Camp sounds like fun, until you realize that if Jesus is indeed there, He's weeping. This is documentary about brainwashing, and child abuse, and yes, Christo-facism. The people depicted in this movie probably have as much to do with Jesus as Al-Queda has to with Muhammed. Scene after scene in the movie must be seen to be beleived. The kids (who mostly five to ten year olds) are made to go up to complete strangers and ask them awkward questions about their religion. They read those insipid religious comic books. They are told that George W. Bush is a model Christian and are made to bless him via an effegy. Some wear combat gear because they are "Soldiers in the Army of Jesus". They are also told that God doesn't come into the church of anyone who doesn't do Pentacostal crap like jump up and dance. We see one family whose mother teaches her kids that the Earth is 6,000 years old, global warming is a myth and evolution never happend. In fact, science itself w ... " [More]
lopezdashlopezdash The Ten Most Anti-Christian Mov ...
by lopezdash in The Movie Blog
loved it.
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"From the Entertainment and Culture blog over at New York Magazine comes a list of THE TEN MOST ANTI-CHRISTIAN MOVIES OF ALL TIME. What a title, eh? 10. Carrie (1976) After the titular protagonist gets her first period at school, her crazy, devoutly Christian mother locks her in a closet and tells her to pray, explaining that only sinners menstruate (Wikipedia says this is false). Luckily, Carrie has telekinetic powers, which she uses to toss her mom across a room, electrocute her principal, and burn down her high school's gymnasium, killing hundreds of students. Parents, take note.Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v =yJe0iVo8y3A 9. Priest (1995) Antonia Bird's film — which caused a flash of protest when Miramax released it — follows Linus Roache's gay priest as he struggles agains ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Tribeca Looking To Sundance-ize
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"The most welcome film festival news of the week comes from The Hollywood Reporter, by way of The Reeler. In a bid to increase their profile as an independent film marketplace, the Tribeca Film Festival will cut the size of their feature slate by as much as 25 percent. A program of 120 films would put Tribeca in the same league, size-wise, as Sundance, which is clearly the intention: “We realize our audience is getting a little overwhelmed by all of our titles,” said Tribeca co-exec director Nancy Schafer. Last year, nearly 30 titles were acquired out of Tribeca, but many were bought by smaller distributors; with the new focus, the festival hopes to bring in bigger buyers and yield more high-profile deals. “We’ve had a lot of movies bought out of the festival but we haven’t had our Sex, Lies & Videotape yet,” Schafer said. “That’s what we want, and that’s what the industry wants.” Steven Soderbergh’s 1989 film, of course, helped to cement Sundance’s status as the highest profile fes ... " [More]
erico_77375erico_77375 Children of the Lord's Flame
by erico_77375 in erico_77375 Blog
loved it.
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"When we listen to Becky Fischer talk about Christ, Christians would first agree with the implied message, and then feel creeped out by the extremity that she brings to her views. She's deeply worried about the condition of the United States, about the role of Christianity in the country, and the lack of religion that in her mind is starting to dominate. What makes her dangerous is that she feels compelled to put her own paranoia on children susceptible to her views at the ages of 5-10. You're not scared of her, so to say, but you're scared of what she could be doing with YOUR children if she had things her way. And yet Jesus Camp is a documentary not really intending to bash its subjects or make them look like villains. It's curious about a sub-culture of Evangelical Christians and how they teach their kids. The film starts off with Becky promoting her Kids on Fire Camp (not exactly the kind of title that I would feel comfortable with) in South Dakota at a church in ... " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Jesus Camp - Al Franken: God Spoke
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
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"By Tricia Olszewski You’ve got a regular Christian on one side and a super-Christian on the other. At least that’s how it’s presented in Jesus Camp, a documentary focused on Pentecostal minister Becky Fischer and the Xtreme Conversion she practices on youngsters. A Methodist radio-show host challenges her fire-and-brimstone approach, saying it has nothing to do with Christ’s message of peace and love. In other words: There’s believing, and then there’s true God-fearing. The latter impression comes first. Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady’s Jesus Camp begins with an alarming, warriorlike performance by staff-wielding kids in camouflage face paint. They dance to a menacing, Christian hard-rock song that’s prefaced by a chorus of young voices proclaiming, “Now is the time.” This is the entertainment at Fischer’s Children’s Prayer Conference, held in Lee’s Summit, Mo., where she will effuse over the dancers and s ... " [More]
averyavery The perfect way to make a docum ...
by avery in avery Blog
loved it.
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"In a world where Michael Moore sets the standard for documentaries, this film stands out. People who are used to their documentaries preaching to them will be confused by the prospect of having to make up their own minds about something. This film can be disturbing, funny, or inspiring, but ultimately it is an intimate look into the lives of parents and children from a culture which many of us will only ever meet as street preachers, if at all. " [More]
HairyLimeHairyLime "ok, everybody, speak in t ...
by HairyLime in HairyLime Blog
loved it.
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"Truly disturbing, would make a good double feature with 'An Inconvenient Truth' for a frightening vision of the future. My favorite scene happens right in the beginning when the camp leader asks her audience of children "who believes that god can do anything? raise your hands!" and the camera cuts to a child sitting on his parents lap, the parent immediately thrusts her child's hand straight up in the air, then grabs her other child's hand sitting next to her and raises it for him as well. I think the thing that is so troubling about this movie, is how completely alien these people seem to me. With most characters in movies, or even with people you meet in the course of your everyday life, you can on one level or another sympathize, or empathize, or in some sense 'get' where they are coming from, imagine what it would be like to 'be that person', to experience life on their terms (I'm thinking to all the myriad of people/backgrounds/environment s ... " [More]
i-heart-arti-heart-art Oh Lord!
by i-heart-art in i-heart-art Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"I am not sure how to rate this film because I can't really say that I liked or disliked it, but I certainly don't feel neutral about it - I feel DEEPLY DISTURBED by it. If ever anything deserved the proclamation, "Jesus, please save me from your followers", this film is it. I read another blog about this film that suggested that it is pointless and not relevant to anything mainstream, but that is incredibly INACCURATE. A big point of this documentary is to illustrate just how the Evangelical Christians are slowly claiming power in this country and chipping away at the separation between church and state. One popular evangelist (documented in the movie as having a weekly telephone conference with President George W. Bush every Monday morning), even admits towards the end of the movie, "if all of the Evangalists vote (which they strongly encourage), we decide the election" [sorry if that is not an exact quote, but if not, it's close] - the movie reveals that 25% of Americans clas ... " [More]
wjrradiowjrradio Jesus Camp
by wjrradio in wjrradio Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"had the chance to see this film, what a disappointment, not sure what the point of this film is exactly, it's not entertaining, it's not telling me anything new, it's not a topic that is anywhere near the mainstream and it's not relevant like most documentaries try to be...I wish I had my hour and 20 minutes back... " [More]
 



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HairyLime
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loved it.
erico_77375
erico_77375
loved it.
lopezdash
lopezdash
loved it.
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sassafrass
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