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       #Post#: 4634--------------------------------------------------
       Insipirational Movies About Christianity
       By: Clay Death Date: December 1, 2013, 9:56 pm
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       please use this place to start making a list of inspirational
       movies about Christianity.
       #Post#: 4709--------------------------------------------------
       Re: Insipirational Movies About Christianity
       By: Sara50840 Date: December 2, 2013, 3:55 pm
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       The Bible!  (
  HTML http://www.history.com/shows/the-bible)
       #Post#: 5069--------------------------------------------------
       Re: Insipirational Movies About Christianity
       By: Clay Death Date: December 7, 2013, 8:37 pm
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       The Hiding Place:
       The Hiding Place (1975):
       ***The Hiding Place is a 1975 film based on the autobiographical
       book of the same name by Corrie ten Boom recounting her and her
       family's experiences before and during their imprisonment in a
       Nazi concentration camp during the Holocaust in World War II.
       The Hiding Place was directed by James F. Collier. Jeanette
       Clift George received a Golden Globe nomination for Most
       Promising Newcomer - Female.[1] The film was given limited
       release in its day and featured the last appearance from Arthur
       O'Connell.
       
       Corrie and Betsie ten Boom are middle-aged sisters working in
       their father's watchmaker shop in pre-WWII Holland... (150
       mins.)
       Director: James F. Collier
       Stars: Julie Harris, Jeannette Clift, Arthur O'Connell, Robert
       Rietty
       PLOT:
       As the Nazis invade Holland in 1940, Corrie and her family allow
       Jews to hide in a part of their home that is specially remodeled
       by members of the Dutch Resistance. However, the Nazis
       eventually discover that Corrie and her family are hiding Jews,
       and on February 29, 1944, the family and their friends are
       arrested after their betrayal by a Dutch collaborator. The
       hidden Jews are never found. Corrie's father, Casper, dies
       before he reaches the concentration camp, and Corrie worries
       that she will never see her home again. The Nazis send Corrie
       and her sister, Betsie, to the Ravensbrück concentration camp in
       Germany for hiding Jews in their home. At the concentration
       camp, Betsie encourages Corrie to remain hopeful that God will
       rescue them from the brutalities they experience. With little
       food and constant work, the women suffer constantly, and
       Corrie's sister Betsie (Julie Harris), dies. Ultimately, Corrie
       (Jeanette Clift George) leaves the camp in December, 1944
       through what is discovered years later to have been a clerical
       error, as everyone in her group of prisoners was marked for
       gassing the following month (January 1945). Her life after this
       ordeal was dedicated to showing that Jesus' love is greater than
       the deepest pit into which humankind finds itself.
       #Post#: 5071--------------------------------------------------
       Re: Insipirational Movies About Christianity
       By: Clay Death Date: December 7, 2013, 8:46 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       Noah (2014)
       The Biblical Noah suffers visions of an apocalyptic deluge and
       takes measures to protect his family from the coming flood.
       Director: Darren Aronofsky
       Stars: Emma Watson, Jennifer Connelly, Logan Lerman, Russell
       Crowe
  HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6qmj5mhDwJQ
       #Post#: 5072--------------------------------------------------
       Re: Insipirational Movies About Christianity
       By: Clay Death Date: December 7, 2013, 8:50 pm
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       The Grace Card (2010)
       
       Everything can change in an instant...and take a lifetime to
       unravel. Every day, we have the opportunity to rebuild
       relationships by extending and receiving God's grace. Offer The
       Grace Card, and never underestimate the power of God's love.
       (101 mins.)
       Director: David G. Evans
       Stars: Michael Joiner, Michael Higgenbottom, Louis Gossett Jr.,
       Joy Parmer Moore
       #Post#: 5073--------------------------------------------------
       Re: Insipirational Movies About Christianity
       By: Clay Death Date: December 7, 2013, 8:59 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       Ben-Hur (1959 film)
       Directed by
       William Wyler
       Produced by
       Sam Zimbalist
       Screenplay by
       Karl Tunberg
       Uncredited:
       Gore Vidal
       Christopher Fry
       Maxwell Anderson
       S. N. Behrman
       Based on
       Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ by Lew Wallace
       Narrated by
       Finlay Currie
       Starring
       Charlton Heston
       Jack Hawkins
       Haya Harareet
       Stephen Boyd
       Hugh Griffith
       Music by
       Miklós Rózsa
       Cinematography
       Robert L. Surtees
       Editing by
       John D. Dunning
       Ralph E. Winters
       Studio
       Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
       Distributed by
       Loew's Inc.[1]
       Release dates
       November 18, 1959
       
       Running time
       212 minutes
       Country
       United States
       Language
       English
       Budget
       $15 million
       Box office
       $146,900,000 (initial release)
       Ben-Hur is a 1959 American epic historical drama film set in
       ancient Rome, directed by William Wyler, produced by Sam
       Zimbalist and starring Charlton Heston, Stephen Boyd, Jack
       Hawkins, Hugh Griffith and Haya Harareet. It won a record 11
       Academy Awards, including Best Picture, an accomplishment that
       was not equaled until Titanic in 1997 and then again by The Lord
       of the Rings: The Return of the King in 2003.
       A remake of the 1925 silent film with the same name, Ben-Hur was
       adapted from Lew Wallace's 1880 novel Ben-Hur: A Tale of the
       Christ. The screenplay is credited to Karl Tunberg but includes
       contributions from Maxwell Anderson, S. N. Behrman, Gore Vidal,
       and Christopher Fry. Ben-Hur had the largest budget and the
       largest sets built for any film produced. The nine-minute
       chariot race has become one of cinema's most famous sequences.
       The score composed by Miklós Rózsa was highly influential on
       cinema for more than 15 years, and is the longest ever composed
       for a film.
       Plot:
       In AD 26, Judah Ben-Hur (Charlton Heston) is a wealthy prince
       and merchant in Jerusalem. His childhood friend, the Roman
       citizen Messala (Stephen Boyd), is now a tribune. After several
       years away from Jerusalem, Messala returns as the new commander
       of the Roman garrison. Messala believes in the glory of Rome and
       its imperial power, while Ben-Hur is devoted to his faith and
       the freedom of the Jewish people. Messala asks Ben-Hur for the
       names of Jews who criticize the Romans. Ben-Hur refuses,
       angering Messala.
       Ben-Hur lives with his mother, Miriam (Martha Scott), and
       sister, Tirzah (Cathy O'Donnell). Their loyal slave Simonides
       (Sam Jaffe) is preparing for an arranged marriage for his
       daughter, Esther (Haya Harareet). Ben-Hur gives Esther her
       freedom as a wedding present, and the audience is shown that
       Ben-Hur and Esther are in love even though her marriage to
       another man is imminent.
       During the parade for the new governor of Judea, Valerius
       Gratus, a tile falls from the roof of Ben-Hur's house. Gratus is
       thrown from his horse and nearly killed. Although Messala knows
       this was an accident, he condemns Ben-Hur to the galleys and
       imprisons Miriam and Tirzah. By punishing a known friend and
       prominent citizen, he hopes to intimidate the Jewish populace.
       Ben-Hur swears to take revenge. Overcome by thirst when his
       slave gang arrives at Nazareth, Ben-Hur collapses. A local
       carpenter (who the audience realizes is Jesus) gives him water.
       After three years as a galley slave, Ben-Hur is assigned to the
       flagship of the Roman Consul Quintus Arrius (Jack Hawkins), who
       has been charged with destroying a fleet of Macedonian pirates.
       Arrius admires Ben-Hur's self-discipline and offers to train him
       as a gladiator or charioteer. Ben-Hur declines the offer,
       declaring that God will aid him in his quest for vengeance.
       The Roman fleet encounters the Macedonians. Arrius orders all
       the rowers except Ben-Hur to be chained to their benches.
       Arrius' galley is rammed and sunk, but Ben-Hur unchains the
       other rowers, and rescues Arrius from the sinking wreckage. In
       despair, Arrius wrongly believes the battle ended in defeat and
       atones in the Roman way by "falling on his sword", but Ben-Hur
       prevents him from committing suicide. Ben-Hur and Arrius are
       rescued, and Arrius is credited with the Roman fleet's victory.
       The consul successfully petitions Emperor Tiberius (George
       Relph) to free Ben-Hur, and adopts him as his son. Several years
       pass off-screen. Now wealthy, Ben-Hur learns Roman ways and
       becomes a champion charioteer, but longs for his family and
       homeland.
       Ben-Hur returns to Judea. Along the way, he meets Balthasar
       (Finlay Currie) and an Arab sheik, Ilderim (Hugh Griffith). The
       sheik has heard of Ben-Hur's prowess as a charioteer, and asks
       him to drive his quadriga in a race before the new Judean
       governor Pontius Pilate (Frank Thring). Ben-Hur declines, even
       after he learns that champion charioteer Messala will also
       compete.
       Ben-Hur returns to his home in Jerusalem. He meets Esther, and
       learns her arranged marriage did not occur and that she is still
       in love with him. He visits Messala and demands his mother and
       sister's freedom. The Romans discover that Miriam and Tirzah
       contracted leprosy in prison, and expel them from the city. The
       women beg Esther to conceal their condition from Ben-Hur, so she
       tells him that his mother and sister died. It is then that he
       changes his mind and decides to seek vengeance on Messala by
       competing against him in the chariot race.
       During the chariot race, Messala drives a chariot with blades on
       the hubs to tear apart competing vehicles. In the violent and
       grueling race, Messala attempts to destroy Ben-Hur's chariot but
       destroys his own instead. Messala is mortally injured, while
       Ben-Hur wins the race. Before dying, Messala tells Ben-Hur that
       "the race is not over" and that he can find his family "in the
       Valley of the Lepers, if you can recognize them." Ben-Hur visits
       the nearby leper colony, where (hidden from their view) he sees
       his mother and sister.
       Esther hears Jesus preach the Sermon on the Mount, and tells
       Ben-Hur about the message of peace and forgiveness she heard.
       Blaming Roman rule for his family's fate, Ben-Hur rejects his
       patrimony and Roman citizenship. Learning that Tirzah is dying,
       Ben-Hur and Esther take her and Miriam to see Jesus, but the
       trial of Jesus before Pontius Pilate has begun. Jesus begins his
       march to Calvary and stumbles before Ben-Hur. Recognizing Jesus
       from their earlier meeting, Ben-Hur attempts to give him water
       but guards separate them.
       Ben-Hur witnesses the crucifixion of Jesus. Miriam and Tirzah
       are miraculously healed. Ben-Hur tells Esther that he heard
       Jesus talk of forgiveness while on the cross, and says "I felt
       His voice take the sword out of my hand." His hatred finally
       relinquished, he is emotionally reunited with his mother and
       sister in the film's final moments.
       Cast[edit]
       Charlton Heston as Judah Ben-Hur
       Jack Hawkins as Quintus Arrius
       Haya Harareet as Esther
       Stephen Boyd as Messala
       Hugh Griffith as Sheik Ilderim
       Martha Scott as Miriam
       Cathy O'Donnell as Tirzah
       Sam Jaffe as Simonides
       Finlay Currie as Balthasar and the narrator
       Frank Thring as Pontius Pilate
       Terence Longdon as Drusus
       George Relph as Tiberius Caesar
       André Morell as Sextus
       Claude Heater as Jesus
       #Post#: 5121--------------------------------------------------
       Re: Insipirational Movies About Christianity
       By: Sara50840 Date: December 8, 2013, 1:16 pm
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       "Facing the Giants" is a good one, too.  It's about a football
       coach and his struggles.
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