christian movies new release




christian movies new release
Does freedom of religion for Muslims in the United States include the creation of videos on how to cut the throats of Americans?

A new video released by the Christian Action Network shows Muslim women in a complex in New York State using butchery techniques and attacks to the assault weapon. The video was distributed by the creators of the movie "Homegrown Jihad: The Terrorist camps around the United States, "which documents how tens jihadist group has developed training camps across the nation. WND reported at the time how Jamaat ul-Fuqra has built 35 compounds – especially in the northeast corridor of the United States today the Organization published a video on YouTube entitled "" paralyzing the training of CAD by an anonymous source from law enforcement about the Muslims headquarters of America in Hancock, New York. http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=119087

I am sure our compassionate liberals would say yes. But here's what we need the freedom to make: We need the freedom to expel all Muslims, and keep until the deportation of peaceful Muslims that we hear a lot about doing something to stop terrorism in the rest of them. These "peaceful" Muslims do nothing. They do not even condemn terrorism. Failure to be here, but it belongs to everyone in the fight against terrorism.

Cloud Ten Church Cinemas – 2008 – NEW RELEASES


Gospel Classics


Gospel Classics



Collection of gospel tracks by the king, Elvis Presley.
Track listing:
1. Swing Down Sweet Chariot
2. Put Your Hand In The Hand
3. His Hand In Mine
4. Oh Happy Day
5. If We Never Meet Again
6. You’ll Never Walk Alone
7. Known Only To Him
8. It Is No Secret (What God Can Do)
9. In My Father’s House (Are Many Mansions)
10. Where Could I Go But To The Lord
11. I Believe In The Man In The Sky
12. I Be…


John Tesh Grand Piano Christmas CD


John Tesh Grand Piano Christmas CD


$3.80


Set the holiday mood with a very special collection of Christmas classics performed by John on grand piano.

Track List:
1. Away In A Manger
2. Angels We Have Heard On High
3. O Holy Night
4. The First Noel
5. The Homecoming
6. Silent Night
7. My Christmas Love
8. We Three Kings
9. What Child Is This
10. Bring A Torch Jeanette, Isabella
11. Good King Wenceslas…



Release Of The Spirit


Release Of The Spirit


$7


“Watchman Nee explains that without the breaking of the outward man there can be no release of the Spirit. Only through brokenness is the human spirit freed to serve effectually. (New Edition includes workbook)”

Release 2.1


Release 2.1


$14.95


“A provocative and visionary look at our new digital society, from “the most powerful woman in the Net-erati” (“The New York Times Magazine”). >Welcome to “Release 2.1,” Esther Dyson’s fascinating exploration of life in our new digital society. In this provocative and timely book, Dyson–an entrepreneur, high-tech industry analyst, government adviser, and Net expert–examines the impact and implications of cyberspace, challenging us to think intelligently about its effect on every aspect of our private and public lives, from businesses to government to education. Written with an insider’s knowledge and ready wit, and filled with anecdotes about the movers and shakers behind the products and politics of the computer industry, “Release 2.1″ presents us with a hard-hitting message: With the advent of the Internet, we all have both the opportunity and the obligation to shape the new rules we want to live by.”

Movies That Matter


Movies That Matter


$12.98


In modern culture, nothing matters more than the movies, says popular film critic and Jesuit Richard Leonard. Movies shape our global civilization. We watch them incessantly, relax with them, argue about them. But movies are much more than casual entertainment and subjects for small talk. They have become the preferred medium for ideas and values and morally serious expression. We need to take movies seriously, Leonard says. To do so, we need to learn how to "read" a film. In Movies that Matter, Leonard views 50 important movies through a "lens of faith" — an informed Christian point of view that immeasurably deepens the astute moviegoer’s viewing experience. He shows how the great directors, screenwriters, and actors employ the "language of film" to celebrate the human spirit and put us in touch with the divine. This knowledgeable, vividly written, provocative guide is an excellent resource for every reader seeking deeper understanding of what the movies are saying.

Release the Power of Jesus


Release the Power of Jesus


$16.99


“>The testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy (Revelation 19:10). Miracles in your life demonstrate the nature of God. Each story told of breakthrough carries the potential to release the power of Jesus into a hopeless situation. When we share what God has done, it causes faith to explode as the testimony prophecies His desire to do the miracle again! In Pastor Bill’s new book, “Release the Power of Jesus,” you will discover how to: Encourage those around you; Leave a legacy of God’s work in your life; Live under the influence of His mighty presence; and Release the Kingdom everywhere you go. Learn how your personal God stories will set your world on fire as you release the power of Jesus!  Page Count:  192>”

Movies


Movies


$3.48


Movies : A Crash Course (Crash Course (Watson-Guptill)) by John Naughton, and Adam Smith Published in 1998 by Watson-Guptill Publications

The Movies Are


The Movies Are


$5.48


The Movies Are : Carl Sandburg’s Film Reviews and Essays, 1920-1928 by Carl Sandburg 1st ed Published in 2000 by Lake Claremont Press

The Slow-Release Miracle: A Spirituality for a Lifetime


The Slow-Release Miracle: A Spirituality for a Lifetime


$14.95


“In The Slow Release Miracle, Andrew Nugent provides readers with a roadmap for reversing the three stages of spiritual awakening: >1. Points of departure (an awakening to the dimensions and dynamics of Christian spiritual life).>2. Vantage points (a growth in wonder for the many gifts of the Spirit in the Church and in the world.)>3. Points of arrival (spiritual maturity, which enables us to go gently into the night, unafraid, with joy and hope). The author points out that there will always be a need to celebrate God’s “age-old beauty” which, in the words of St. Augustine, is “so old–and yet so new.” The human spirit unfolding is a participation in God’s beauty, God’s work of art.”

Release Your Anointing


Release Your Anointing


$24.99


“Some people only talk about it. TD Jakes lives it!> Now you can live it too!> You see him on television, you read his books, you listen to him pray…and you always see the anointing pouring from his life.> Now, TD Jakes reveals the principles he lives by and shows you how you , too, can live in the anointing.> Bishop Jakes’ compelling teachings have influenced millions over the years, now you can discover these compelling secrets for your life and ministry.> Experiencing the anointing of the Holy Ghost flowing from your life begins with these simple principles: >>We all desperately need the anointing to succeed in everything >The Holy Ghost knows better than we do >The Holy Ghost is always with us, leading us, prompting us >Yielding to the power of the Holy Ghost launches us toward our potential and destiny> Christians must know that their lives with God can be full of new experiences every day. Instead of merely enduring our salvation, we can enjoy the fullness that God has provided in the Holy Ghost. – T.D. Jakes> Release Your Anointing will propel you into the exciting future that God planned uniquely for you!”

The Movies


The Movies


$9.48


The medium of film has entertained audiences for more than 100 years. It has also intrigued scholars. What qualities give a film the complexity and resonance of high art? What effects do films produce in spectators and in society? How is our appreciation of a film dependent on such different elements as the screen, the stars, the zeitgeist, and even the petty business deals in Hollywood studios? Laurence Goldstein and Ira Konigsberg, the editors of The Movies: Texts, Receptions, Exposures, have sought to answer these questions by gathering writing and visual art from a variety of perspectives that describe the history, art, and technology of motion pictures in deep-focus detail.The book’s first part, "Analyzing Films," offers essays on six important films: Secrets of a Soul, The Wizard of Oz, The Silence of the Lambs, The Last Emperor, The King of Comedy, and Menace II Society. Each reading uses a different methodology to reveal intricate structure and cultural provenance of the film narrative.The second part, "Making Films," takes the reader behind the camera for some expert testimony, including an interview with the great director Billy Wilder, a montage by screenwriter William Harrison of his fateful meetings in the film capital, a memoir by Arthur Miller, and an account by M-G-M producer Sam Marx of how the first film about the atomic bomb came into being.The third part, "Screening Films," measures the impact of movies on their audiences. Diane Kirkpatrick contributes an essay on how artists have responded to the movies. In short stories Laura Antillano, a Venezuelan, and Janset Berkok Shami, a Jordanian, dramatize the colonizing of other continents by the Hollywood dream factory. Leo Braudy assesses the treatment of the male body in the Brando and Dean flicks of the 1950s, while William Paul chronicles the narrative of the screen, that looked-at and overlooked monitor for the moviegoing public. A fourth part, "The Poetry of Film," collects some compelling recent poems about the movies: Margaret Atwood on Ava Gardner, Mordechai Geldmann on pornography, and Pier Paolo Pasolini on Marilyn Monroe, among others. Also included are archival essays by modernist poets H.D. and Vachel Lindsay, on Greta Garbo and the necessity of censorship, respectively.It is rare for a collection to investigate cinema with this much wit, creative play, and scholarly rigor. Common to all the contents, however, is a thoroughly contemporary manner of treating what Arthur Miller calls "the single great cultural invention of this civilization." Laurence Goldstein is the author of The American Poet at the Movies: A Critical History, editor of The Female Body: Figures, Styles, Speculations, and The Male Body: Features, Destinies, Exposures, and Professor of English, University of Michigan. Ira Konigsberg is Professor of English and Film/Video Studies, University of Michigan.

Zombie Movies


Zombie Movies


$17.98


Featuring chronological reviews of more than 300 zombie films—from 1932′s White Zombie to George A. Romero’s 2008 release Diary of the Dead—this thorough, uproarious guide traces the evolution of one of horror cinema’s most popular and terrifying creations. Fans will learn exactly what makes a zombie a zombie, go behind the scenes with a chilling production diary from Land of the Dead, peruse a bizarre list of the oddest things ever seen in undead cinema, and immerse themselves in a detailed rundown of the 25 greatest zombie films ever made. Containing an illustrated zombie rating system, ranging from "Highly Recommended" to "Avoid at All Costs" and "So Bad It’s Good," the book also features lengthy interviews with numerous talents from in front of and behind the camera.

The Christian Family Guide to Movies and Video


The Christian Family Guide to Movies and Video


$4.47


This book is in New – Excellent condition

The New Release


The New Release


$11.56


The New Release

Release


Release


$18.98


Release : Healing from Wounds of Family, Church, and Community by Flora Slosson Wuellner Published in 1996 by Upper Room Books

Finding Faith at the Movies


Finding Faith at the Movies


$12.48


Using movies to explore faith and spirituality issues is in vogue today, but it’s difficult to find the time to show and discuss a full-length film in most adult or youth classes or groups. Barbara Mraz, a deacon in the Episcopal Church and a high school teacher, found a solution. This practical, hands-on book will help Christian educators, youth leaders, and anyone wishing to use films as teaching tools to explore and discuss a film within the usual 40-50 minutes available. Mraz provides an introduction, related Scripture passages, carefully selected film segments (with VCR counter numbers and DVD settings), and thought-provoking discussion questions for twelve movies that explore topics such as temptation, duty, forgiveness, redemption, gratitude, and other important Christian values. This proven technique – one Mraz has been using for years – requires a minimum of preparation and generates the maximum in participation. Industry film ratings are provided so leaders can pick appropriate films.

Rack, Shack & Benny [Re-release]


Rack, Shack & Benny [Re-release]


$9.99


“>New Package! New Price! By paralleling the biblical story of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego and the fiery furnace, Rack, Shack & Benny teaches kids how to handle peer pressure in a fun, new way.> >>>Ages 4-14>>> >>>Runtime: 60 minutes>>> >>>Released 02/2009>>>”

Theology Goes to the Movies


Theology Goes to the Movies


$37.48


Drawing a comparison between religion and cinema-going, this text examines a range of contemporary films in relation to key theological concepts. Cinema as a religion-like activity is explored through cognitive, affective, aesthetic and ethical levels, identifying the religious aspects in the social practice of cinema-going. Written by a leading expert in the field, Theology Goes to the Movies analyzes:the role of cinema and Church in Western culturethe power of Christian symbols and images within popular culturetheological concepts of humanity, evil and redemption, eschatology and God.This is an ideal text for students seeking a new way into the study of theology.

Christian History Made Easy


Christian History Made Easy


$14.99


“>>>Christian History Made Easy>>> summarizes the most important events in Christian history from the time of Jesus to today in 12 easy chapters. This full color, bestselling book presents key events and people every Christian should know, time lines, worksheets, websites, photos, maps and illustrations. A leader’s guide makes this book an excellent study for any group, including new believers’ classes.>> >>What do you know about Christian history? Here’s your chance to test yourself, or to launch a 13 week study on the book >Christian History Made Easy>. The book contains a Leader’s Guide with notes that add to the chapters. Author Timothy Paul Jones, Ed.D., makes Christian history refreshingly fun while at the same time informing believers about the history of the Christian faith. Key events >> >>Page Count: 160 pages includes leaders guide.>Dimensions: 9”(L) X 7(W) X 0.20”(D)>Release: 07/2009>>>”

Josh and the Big Wall [Re-release]


Josh and the Big Wall [Re-release]


$9.99


“>New Package! Oh, boy! After 40 years of wandering in the desert, the children of Israel finally get to go to the Promised Land! Only one little thing they’ve overlooked … Jericho! In the end, will they decide to do things their way or God’s way!> >>Ages 4-14>>>Runtime: 30 minutes>>>Released 02/2009>>”

Dave and the Giant Pickle [Re-release]


Dave and the Giant Pickle [Re-release]


$9.99


“>New Package! Have you ever felt too small to do a really big job? This telling of the classic biblical store of David and Goliath teaches kids that ‘with God, all things are possible.’ It makes no different whether you’re 9-feet tall or 2-feet tall – with God’s help, even little guys can do big things! Featuring the Silly Song ‘I Love My Lips!’> >>>Ages 4-14>>> >>>Runtime: 30 minutes>>> >>>Released: 02/2004>>>”

What A Wonderful World [Re-Release]


What A Wonderful World [Re-Release]


$13.99


“With over 1 million records sold—we bring you the best of the Anne Murray’s Platinum recording What A Wonderful World on one CD with 14 songs. Aggressively priced at the single disc retail price—there are many more boomers waiting to discover timeless classic inspiration songs from an vocal legend. Currently building on success of her new Duets CD in the marketplace, this best of What A Wonderful World will be the perfect addition to the Anne Murray collection. Featuring songs like “Put A Little Love In Your Heart,â€? “Let It Be,â€? “Just A Closer Walk With Thee,â€? “Amazing Graceâ€? and more.”

The New York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made


The New York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made


$16.27


A-Z collection of reviews of many of the greatest movies ever made, as they originally appeared the New York Times upon the film’s release

Comic Release


Comic Release


$11.98


Cartoon and comic book imagery are suddenly ubiquitous. Since the 1950s in the United States, they have been considered primarily as an entertainment vehicle for children, their lowbrow status allowing them to thrive outside of the critical, aesthetic, and commercial criteria expected of the art world. Today cartoon-based imagery is regular fare on TV and in movies from Hollywood to Tokyo, aimed toward both children and adults. At the same time, an alternative use of this imagery is proliferating in cult and underground zines and comics, as well as in respected art galleries, museums, and contemporary art spaces around the world. As the boundaries between high and low blur to the point of disappearance, cartoons have emerged from cult status in the underground to mainstream culture, where they provide a vehicle for critique in a postmodern world. They continue a narrative tradition at a time when computer-generated systems of nonlinear thinking are emerging and epitomize the accessibility and disposability of our times. Cartoons and comics provide a universal language of immediately recognizable cultural icons that appeal to the instant-gratification demands of our contemporary world. Internationally, cartoon imagery is playing an increasing role in contemporary art. Whether through clear appropriation or distorted likenesses made with the purpose of satirizing its subjects, cartoon-like graphics are a visual language adopted by artists across the globe. Karen Finley renders a postmodern version of Pooh, riddled with contemporary questions about identity. Yoshitomo Nara’s evil-eyed, malevolent children and kamikaze puppies make reference to Japan’s role in World War II while explicitly defying our expectations of childhood innocence. Kerry James Marshall leads a group of African American artists who have adopted comic book language to revise their history. Artists are using cartoon imagery to address controversial, even politically incorrect issues that are difficult to assimilate into mainstream art galleries and museums through realistic depictions. Through comic book imagery, they can move beyond reality, shaping heroines, superheros, and even worlds for current and future escapism.

Release It!


Release It!


$25.48


Whether it’s in Java, .NET, or Ruby on Rails, getting your application ready to ship is only half the battle. Did you design your system to survive a sudden rush of visitors from Digg or Slashdot? Or an influx of real world customers from 100 different countries? Are you ready for a world filled with flakey networks, tangled databases, and impatient users?If you’re a developer and don’t want to be on call at 3AM for the rest of your life, this book will help.In Release It!, Michael T. Nygard shows you how to design and architect your application for the harsh realities it will face. You’ll learn how to design your application for maximum uptime, performance, and return on investment.Mike explains that many problems with systems today start with the design:"It’s disconnected from the real world. It’s the same as cars designed solely in the cool comfort of the lab-they look great in models and CAD systems, but don’t work well in the real world. You want a car designed by somebody who knows that oil changes are always 3,000 miles late; that the tires must work just as well on the last sixteenth of an inch of tread as on the first; and that you will certainly, at some point, stomp on the brakes while you’re holding an Egg McMuffin in one hand and a cell phone in the other." With a combination of case studies and practical advice, Patterns to follow and Anti-Patterns to avoid, Release It! will help you manage the pitfalls that cost companies huge amounts of time and money each year.

New Texas History Movies


New Texas History Movies


$7.46


New Texas History Movies

Movies About the Movies


Movies About the Movies


$23.98


Movies About the Movies : Hollywood Reflected by Christopher Ames Reprint Published in 1997 by University Press of Kentucky

The Movies Begin: Making Movies in New Jersey, 1887-1920


The Movies Begin: Making Movies in New Jersey, 1887-1920


$10.51


The Movies Begin: Making Movies in New Jersey, 1887-1920

At The Movies


At The Movies


$9.99


The contemporary jazz saxophonist Dave Koz explores the world of movie themes on this tribute to classic Hollywood musical moments, with the help of talented jazz and commercial singers like Johnny Mathis, Barry Manilow, Anita Baker, and Donna Summer. Koz’s program of popular themes includes THE WIZARD OF OZ’s Over the Rainbow, the theme from THE PINK PANTHER, and the theme from SCHINDLER’S LIST, all performed in his signature mellow style. Track Listing 1. Over The Rainbow – The Wizard Of Oz 2. Moon River featuring Barry Manilow – Breakfast At Tiffany’s 3. As Time Goes By – Casablanca 4. Somewhere featuring Anita Baker – West Side Story 5. The Shadow Of Your Smile (Love Theme From The Sandpiper ) featuring Johnny Mathis and Chris Botti – The Sandpiper 6. The Pink Panther – The Pink Panther 7. The Way We Were featuring Vanessa Williams – The Way We Were 8. The Summer Knows (Theme From Summer Of ’42 ) – Summer Of 42 9. It Might Be You featuring India.Arie – Tootsie 10. Cinema Paradiso Suite – Cinema Paradiso 11. A Whole New World featuring Donna Summer – Aladdin 12. Schindler’s List (Main Theme) – Schindler’s List

Praying the Movies


Praying the Movies


$24.95


“This book is a collection of 31 devotionals — one a day for a month — that seek to connect movies with the spiritual life of moviegoers. Each devotional contains passages from Scripture, an introduction to a scene from a popular film, a description of that scene, a meditation on the themes in the scene and Scripture, questions to encourage further reflection on the part of the reader, a suggestion for a hymn, and a brief prayer. This book can be used by an individual or in group study.”

Theology Goes to the Movies: An Introduction to Critical Christian Thi


Theology Goes to the Movies: An Introduction to Critical Christian Thi


$120.27


<PDrawing a comparison between religion and cinema-going, this text examines a range of contemporary films in relation to key theological concepts. Cinema as a religion-like activity is explored through cognitive, affective, aesthetic and ethical levels, identifying the religious aspects in the social practice of cinema-going. </P<PWritten by a leading expert in the field, <EMTheology Goes to the Movies </EManalyzes:</P<UL<LIthe role of cinema and Church in Western culture</LI<LIthe power of Christian symbols and images within popular culture</LI<LItheological concepts of humanity, evil and redemption, eschatology and God.</LI</UL<P</P<PThis is an ideal text for students seeking a new way into the study of theology. </P<P<STRONG’By starting from issues explored in particular films, the book helps to ground theological debates in relation to human questions and experience. This really helps to bring the discipline of theology alive, and I wish this book had been available when I was a theology student.’</STRONG<EM}}} Gordon Lynch, Senior Lecturer in Religion and Culture, University of Birmingham, UK</EM</P<P<STRONG’Marsh is correct! Theology is not just cognitive, but affective, aesthetic and ethical. And film has become a primary resource. Here is a helpful work-book for culturally-savy theology students and theologically-interested film-lovers.’</STRONG<EM}}}</EM<EMRobert K. Johnston, author of Reel Spirituality: Theology and Film in Dialogue</EM</P<PClive Marsh teaches in the Department of Theology at the University of Nottingham and is also Secretary of the Faith and Order Committee of the Methodist Church. He is a well-respected writer and teacher, and his previous books include <EMCinema and Sentiment: Film}}}s Challenge to Theology</EM, Patern@^G®záÿ¾Úð

A Day at the Movies


A Day at the Movies


$8.98


This exceptionally well-programmed compilation album is a triple threat. First, it assembles, in chronological order, notable songs that Doris Day sang in her films during her first decade as a movie star; second, with titles like “It’s Magic,” “Secret Love,” and “Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera, Sera),” it functions as a hits collection; and, perhaps surprisingly, third, it arguably is a rarities album as well. Annotator Max O. Preeo, writing with the benefit of an interview with his subject, notes that the version of “It’s Magic” included here is the actual original hit version recorded in 1947; apparently all subsequent reissues of the song have been of a re-recording Day did in 1952. Several other songs, including the title tunes from her second and third films, My Dream Is Yours and It’s a Great Feeling, are given their first release since they came out initially, and the version of “I Love The Way You Say Goodnight” from Lullaby of Broadway is released commercially for the first time. While making a series of musicals for Warner Bros. pictures in the late 1940s and early 1950s, Day benefited from the opportunity to sing old and new songs by such classic pop writers as Sammy Cahn, Vernon Duke, Ray Evans, Sammy Fain, E.Y. Harburg, Lorenz Hart, Gus Kahn, Jay Livingston, Richard Rodgers, Jule Styne, Harry Warren, and Vincent Youmans, and to perform (on these, mostly non-soundtrack studio versions) backed by such bandleaders as Frank DeVol, Percy Faith, Ray Heindorf, Harry James, Axel Stordahl, and Paul Weston. She made the most of those connections, using her band-singer background and warm tone to create performances that were the highpoints of the often flimsy films in which they appeared. The results are here to enjoy. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music GuidePerformers: Doris Day – Vocals

A Conservative Christian Reviews The Greatest Movies Ever Made


A Conservative Christian Reviews The Greatest Movies Ever Made


$15.16


A Conservative Christian Reviews The Greatest Movies Ever Made

Tiny Colour Movies


Tiny Colour Movies


$11.99


John Foxx’s career continues with the release of his brand new instrumental album Tiny Colour Movies. The album consists of 15 electronic instrumental tracks that are a fascinating mixture of Neu!, Eno, The Future’s The Golden Hour Of The Future, old Gary Numan B-sides, Kraftwerk, Cluster, the soundtracks to Blade Runner and Forbidden Planet, the Radiophonic Workshop and even Jean Michel Jarre! They also have the filmic, atmospheric approach of early John Foxx tracks such as Glimmer and Mr No .

Arts, Entertainment, and Christian Values


Arts, Entertainment, and Christian Values


$3.98


Christian analysis of the use and impact of contemporary music, movies, television, computers, and the Internet on society and families.

The Slow-Release Miracle


The Slow-Release Miracle


$13.98


Many books on spirituality seem to envisage it as a skill, a technique, a discipline, a therapy or an experience. But spirituality is much more than these things. According to Andrew Nugent it is the slow-release miracle, the ongoing creative work of the Spirit, wherein we come to truly exist. It is a life, which the Holy Spirit progressively creates within us; a profound attitude of soul; a commitment in love to God. In THE SLOW RELEASE MIRACLE, Andrew Nugent provides readers with a roadmap for traversing the three stages of spiritual awakening: 1. Points of departure (an awakening to the dimensions and dynamics of Christian spiritual life). 2. Vantage points (a growth in wonder for the many gifts of the Spirit in the Church and in the world.) 3. Points of arrival (spiritual maturity, which enables us to go gently into the night, unafraid, with joy and hope). The author points out that there will always be a need to celebrate God’s ”age-old beauty" which, in the words of St. Augustine, is " so old–and yet so new." The human spirit unfolding is a participation in God’s beauty, God’s work of art.

Movies Were Always Magical


Movies Were Always Magical


$34.98


This work is a compilation of interviews with 19 film actors, directors, and producers who were all part of the studio system that made Hollywood such a powerful and illustrious city in the era of the 1950s. Each of the celebrities interviewed for this work have made lasting contributions to the film industry, and some of them continue to do so. Pat Boone, Jeff Corey, Kathryn Grayson, Beverly Garland, Samuel Goldwyn, Jr., Jane Greer, Stanley Kramer, Janet Leigh, Joan Leslie, Sheree North, Janis Paige, Luise Rainer, Paula Raymond, John Saxon, Vincent Sherman, Robert Wise, Jane Withers, Jane Wyatt and Fred Zinnemann speak candidly about their work and experiences in Hollywood and share many of their memories. Each interview is followed by a complete filmography for each film that the actor, director, or producer was a part of, giving such information as the U.S. distributor, year of release, director, producer, screenwriter, editor, composer, running time, and cast for each film.

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