Teenagers wearing suits have been banned from attending some screenings of Minions: The Rise Of Gru after a viral trend prompted unruly behavior.
Groups of young friends in sharp suits have been filming themselves attending the latest Despicable Me spin-off before posting it on TikTok as part of the new #gentleminions trend. The videos show groups of suited youngsters in cinemas across the globe while adopting a hand gesture commonly used by supervillain Felonious Gru (voiced by Steve Carell).
It’s thought that most of the videos just show groups...
Groups of young friends in sharp suits have been filming themselves attending the latest Despicable Me spin-off before posting it on TikTok as part of the new #gentleminions trend. The videos show groups of suited youngsters in cinemas across the globe while adopting a hand gesture commonly used by supervillain Felonious Gru (voiced by Steve Carell).
It’s thought that most of the videos just show groups...
- 7/5/2022
- by Larisha Paul and Nick Reilly
- Rollingstone.com
Low-budget horror film Final: The Rapture, about the end times foretold in the Bible, is aiming to convert cinemagoers to God – through terrible dialogue and cheap effects
• Rick Santorum's Christmas movie proves flop
The Ten Commandments, The Passion of the Christ, the forthcoming Russell Crowe epic Noah – the Bible has long been a wellspring for filmmakers, who have also used a struggle between Christian good and evil in horror films from The Exorcist to Stigmata. But now Christianity and horror are being blended with pure evangelism in Final: The Rapture, a low-budget thriller that is – very slowly – sweeping the Us.
"We're trying to share this so their eyes will be opened … so people go home with hope," producer Susan Chey told the Orlando Sentinel, comparing it to a "Trojan horse" that would introduce people to faith. "The Christian community loves the film because they believe in the Book of Revelation,...
• Rick Santorum's Christmas movie proves flop
The Ten Commandments, The Passion of the Christ, the forthcoming Russell Crowe epic Noah – the Bible has long been a wellspring for filmmakers, who have also used a struggle between Christian good and evil in horror films from The Exorcist to Stigmata. But now Christianity and horror are being blended with pure evangelism in Final: The Rapture, a low-budget thriller that is – very slowly – sweeping the Us.
"We're trying to share this so their eyes will be opened … so people go home with hope," producer Susan Chey told the Orlando Sentinel, comparing it to a "Trojan horse" that would introduce people to faith. "The Christian community loves the film because they believe in the Book of Revelation,...
- 1/24/2014
- by Ben Beaumont-Thomas
- The Guardian - Film News
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