The aim of this paper is to offer a critical response to Anton Karl Kozlovic’s article, published in the Journal of Religion and Popular Culture in 2004, on “The Structural Characteristics of the Cinematic Christ-figure.” Even though one may be able to discern a parallel between a film character and the person of Christ, I argue that Kozlovic’s tendency to impose Christian motifs on to films rests on the false assumption that all of the facets of Christ’s life and work can be fitted into a particular typology, such that a film either does, or does not, have the necessary definitional properties. I propose adopting a new approach to the theology-film field which entails not the pursuit of redundant thematic parallels but asking whether or no...
Dr. Lewis compares the movies of Ben Hur and King of Kings for the way in which they treat the m...
This article undertakes the issue of defining film phenomena which put forward questions of a primar...
Numerous attempts have been made to portray Christ in fictionalized adaptations, almost inevitably r...
One of the challenges for theology is the apparent ease with which one can search for correlations b...
In this second century of the Age of Hollywood and the reign of moving image culture, popular featur...
This is the second century of the age of Hollywood, yet, the pedagogic utilisation of popular featur...
Jesus films abound, but less appreciated are the numerous hidden Jesus characters built into popular...
Numerous Christian references exist within the popular cinema, but they are frequently ignored, dism...
Numerous Christian references exist within popular cinema, but they are frequently ignored, dismisse...
Marking the invention of cinema as a point of entry and consequent filmic narratives about Jesus as ...
JESUS COVERED IN A SECULAR WRAPPER: THE CHRIST-FIGURE IN POPULAR FILMSPOPULAR feature films(1) shoul...
With the decline and fall of the religious epic, christology (the study of the person of Christ) in ...
Christ-figures increasingly permeate the popular cinema, but hunting for them is not necessarily a b...
Partially in response to Anton Karl Kozlovic’s call for research to refine the concept of the cinema...
<strong>Tendencies in film hermeneutics.</strong> Hollywood is synonymous with the tradi...
Dr. Lewis compares the movies of Ben Hur and King of Kings for the way in which they treat the m...
This article undertakes the issue of defining film phenomena which put forward questions of a primar...
Numerous attempts have been made to portray Christ in fictionalized adaptations, almost inevitably r...
One of the challenges for theology is the apparent ease with which one can search for correlations b...
In this second century of the Age of Hollywood and the reign of moving image culture, popular featur...
This is the second century of the age of Hollywood, yet, the pedagogic utilisation of popular featur...
Jesus films abound, but less appreciated are the numerous hidden Jesus characters built into popular...
Numerous Christian references exist within the popular cinema, but they are frequently ignored, dism...
Numerous Christian references exist within popular cinema, but they are frequently ignored, dismisse...
Marking the invention of cinema as a point of entry and consequent filmic narratives about Jesus as ...
JESUS COVERED IN A SECULAR WRAPPER: THE CHRIST-FIGURE IN POPULAR FILMSPOPULAR feature films(1) shoul...
With the decline and fall of the religious epic, christology (the study of the person of Christ) in ...
Christ-figures increasingly permeate the popular cinema, but hunting for them is not necessarily a b...
Partially in response to Anton Karl Kozlovic’s call for research to refine the concept of the cinema...
<strong>Tendencies in film hermeneutics.</strong> Hollywood is synonymous with the tradi...
Dr. Lewis compares the movies of Ben Hur and King of Kings for the way in which they treat the m...
This article undertakes the issue of defining film phenomena which put forward questions of a primar...
Numerous attempts have been made to portray Christ in fictionalized adaptations, almost inevitably r...