This piece attempts to articulate a theological reading of the film Magnolia, directed by P.T. Anderson. The author endeavours to locate God within the matrix of human relationality in the film. The God depicted in Magnolia, argues the author, is the God of liberation, the God who took the Israelites out of Egyptian slavery. This God of Exodus gives signs of imminent freedom to people living within systems of captivity which crush dreams and deny the flourishing of hope. Magnolia depicts the lives of people tossed aside by the television industry in Los Angeles. God\u27s signs, however, remind us that it is precisely those who are tossed aside, or marginalized, who will find a new voice and help heal the brokenness of the world. The crowd w...
This book has two main areas of focus: first, how it is possible to develop theological perspectives...
The aim of this article is to examine the manner and extent to which the medium of film is capable o...
How plausible is it to examine the medium of film through a Christian lens? Are there any grounds fo...
This paper explores how sound is used in P. T. Anderson’s Magnolia to convey the deep narrative of t...
In the following essay I identify some of the images of God I have found in contemporary, popular mo...
Two films from 1998, The Truman Show and Pleasantville, provide a possible basis for theological dis...
One of the most theologically interesting aspects of cinema is its apparent capacity to mediate reve...
This paper is a reading of André Bazin’s article “Cinema and Theology”, which reflects on the relati...
This article offers a reading of P.T Anderson’s ‘Magnolia’ (1999) as a film that employs the formal ...
Terrence Malick’s 2011 film The Tree of Life defies any attempt to be summarized in a few pat senten...
Three recent films, The Sixth Sense, The Matrix, and American Beauty, richly illustrate numerous cla...
Alain Badiou’s interpretation of Paul Thomas Anderson’s film Magnolia is a paradigmatic example of h...
Many Hollywood films are content to offer Americans an escape from the conflicts of contemporary lif...
For me as a teenager, secular films were merely a form of entertainment. A trip to the movies meant ...
In this article, I examine how film enables us to (re-)examine, critique and challenge the efficacy ...
This book has two main areas of focus: first, how it is possible to develop theological perspectives...
The aim of this article is to examine the manner and extent to which the medium of film is capable o...
How plausible is it to examine the medium of film through a Christian lens? Are there any grounds fo...
This paper explores how sound is used in P. T. Anderson’s Magnolia to convey the deep narrative of t...
In the following essay I identify some of the images of God I have found in contemporary, popular mo...
Two films from 1998, The Truman Show and Pleasantville, provide a possible basis for theological dis...
One of the most theologically interesting aspects of cinema is its apparent capacity to mediate reve...
This paper is a reading of André Bazin’s article “Cinema and Theology”, which reflects on the relati...
This article offers a reading of P.T Anderson’s ‘Magnolia’ (1999) as a film that employs the formal ...
Terrence Malick’s 2011 film The Tree of Life defies any attempt to be summarized in a few pat senten...
Three recent films, The Sixth Sense, The Matrix, and American Beauty, richly illustrate numerous cla...
Alain Badiou’s interpretation of Paul Thomas Anderson’s film Magnolia is a paradigmatic example of h...
Many Hollywood films are content to offer Americans an escape from the conflicts of contemporary lif...
For me as a teenager, secular films were merely a form of entertainment. A trip to the movies meant ...
In this article, I examine how film enables us to (re-)examine, critique and challenge the efficacy ...
This book has two main areas of focus: first, how it is possible to develop theological perspectives...
The aim of this article is to examine the manner and extent to which the medium of film is capable o...
How plausible is it to examine the medium of film through a Christian lens? Are there any grounds fo...