Sean bean young
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It takes place in Christ’s “hidden” childhood, when Jesus was seven. The filmmakers, perhaps not wanting to prejudice viewer’s minds based on Rice’ less-than-religious prior writings, don’t mention this in trailers, nor the opening credits. The story is based on Anne Rice’ 2005 Novel Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt. A few episodes are similar to childhood stories of Jesus as shown in apocryphal books, but they do not portray anything contradictory to the Christ of the Gospels.
#Sean bean young movie
Much like the movie Risen which hit theaters last month, The Young Messiah finds a clever way to spread the good news: through fiction that tells a separate story from the Gospels without losing the truth in them. That is an important to take note of. However, such editing is often necessary when taking a story told in several paragraphs in the Bible, and turning it into a feature-length movie (see: Noah). Harder still: doing so when audience members could be offended if the story leaves out or adds details. It’s difficult to generate viewers from texts people have studied for thousands of years. One obstacle studios face is that the stories are already known. Many lament the lack of major motion pictures depicting Bible-based stories. Director Cyrus Nowrasteh achieves this and more. If The Young Messiah (opening Friday, March 11) accomplished nothing other than offering a way to spread biblical values via Hollywood, it would succeed for that alone.