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You can now buy ADVANCE TICKETS to see Mel Gibson's "The Passion of The Christ"
http://www.passion-movie.com/ ^ | 12/9/03

Posted on 12/09/2003 6:45:25 AM PST by truthandlife

IT'S OFFICIAL! You can now buy ADVANCE TICKETS to see Mel Gibson's "The Passion of The Christ". Icon Productions has set up a toll-free ticket hotline for your ordering requests (see below for telephone number). The best way to show your support for the film now is to purchase advance tickets. This sends a clear message to theaters across the world that people really are interested in seeing this film. The more people that buy advance tickets, the more theaters will carry the movie. The more theaters that carry the movie, the more people will get a chance to see it.

Advance tickets are currently only available for the UNITED STATES and CANADA.

Many of you have already told us that advance tickets would make great Christmas gifts! Well now you can get them after all. There also may be discounts for qualifying large group sales.

Please be patient when calling as there will hopefully be an overwhelming response to purchase tickets! You may have to hold for a short time when calling before getting an operator. If you get a busy signal, please try again at a later time.

It's great news -- there are now distributors for the United States and Canada and many theaters have agreed to carry the film! The film will be launched on February 25, 2004 in both the United States and Canada. (Details for other countries hopefully coming soon). Icon Productions has now made available the toll-free telephone hotline open 24 hours/day for advance tickets. Although some theaters have agreed to carry the film, some still have not. If people buy advance tickets and show their support of this movie, it increases the likelihood that more theaters will get on board and carry the film.

Individual tickets and groups tickets can be purchased. In fact, large groups have already been known to order all tickets for an entire theater! If you have a group or congregation that wants to see this film, there may be discounts for qualifying groups. So, tell everyone about this great opportunity to get this important film into even more theaters!

If you live in the United States or Canada and would like to order advance tickets please call:

(888) 227 - 1152

or visit our website for more details:

http://www.passion-movie.com/english/tickets.html

We can achieve an amazing impact on the acceptance of this film if we can reach our website goals. We believe that if each qualifying person that receives this email can get a group of at least 5 people to see this film and order advance tickets, it will have a tremendous impact. So, if you were planning to see this film and know others who were too, please consider the purchase of advance tickets. And please pass this email on to everyone you think might be interested. (The film still may not be available in all areas - please visit our website or call the toll-free number for more information).

The toll-free phone number is ONLY for pre-sale questions and advance ticket sales, so please use it responsibly.

Also, please visit the Frequently Asked Questions section of our website for more information regarding the film:

http://www.passion-movie.com/english/faq.html


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1 posted on 12/09/2003 6:45:27 AM PST by truthandlife
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To: truthandlife
By the way...http://www.aintitcool.com now has a series of reviews on the rough cut of the film that they managed to secure for their annual film festival. Some of the reviewers are fairly foul mouthed and state that they are not religious...yet, when they start to talk about the film, every one of them were blown away by the power of it...and it's still not finished yet.
2 posted on 12/09/2003 6:53:42 AM PST by Brian Mosely
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To: truthandlife
My son saw Mel's movie this past weekend....not sure if he saw the whole thing or just parts of it, but he was in awe.(he was at a special premiere)
He did say that it will probably recieve an R rating because of the graphic death on the cross.

He also saw the whole of Return of the King and was awe-struck as well.

3 posted on 12/09/2003 6:53:44 AM PST by Guenevere (..., .a long time Florida resident and voter!)
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To: truthandlife
He also said that during a 90 minute question/answer session with Mel Gibson (LIVE) Mel was initially nervous and not sure how he and the film would be received.

But I believe son said the film drew a standing ovation....

..and even though the crowd consisted of agnostics, atheists and Christians.....they were almost unanimous in their affirmation of the film.

4 posted on 12/09/2003 6:56:26 AM PST by Guenevere (..., .a long time Florida resident and voter!)
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To: Guenevere
He must have been at the same event that I link to above. The Return of the King was shown before The Passion of the Christ at the festival...
5 posted on 12/09/2003 6:57:36 AM PST by Brian Mosely
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To: Guenevere
How did your son get a pre-screen of the movie?
6 posted on 12/09/2003 6:58:10 AM PST by truthandlife ("Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the name of the LORD our God." (Ps 20:7))
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To: Brian Mosely
That was held in Austin, they show rough-cuts sometimes (although ROTK is probably finished). I had a friend who went and was blown away by both movies.
7 posted on 12/09/2003 7:16:18 AM PST by af_vet_rr
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To: truthandlife
It was a special event.....I haven't heard all the details from him yet....just some.

I think only a certain number can get in....they have to be invited?

My son is a computer animator, and he said he was in a room full of cgi geeks, and they were blown away by Gibson's Passion

8 posted on 12/09/2003 7:31:11 AM PST by Guenevere (..., .a long time Florida resident and voter!)
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To: truthandlife
I should probably add he considers himself a cgi geek too :^)
9 posted on 12/09/2003 7:45:44 AM PST by Guenevere (..., .a long time Florida resident and voter!)
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To: Guenevere
BUMP
10 posted on 12/09/2003 8:35:51 AM PST by truthandlife ("Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the name of the LORD our God." (Ps 20:7))
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To: Brian Mosely
Talkbackers are nothing more than the peanut gallery. Quite often they are persons who have not seen the film and have no intention of seeing the film.

Look for viewers who submit actual formatted reviews to that site (talkback doesn't allow any newlines, either).

Only 250 people went to that screening this weekend (and thousands attempted to get tickets, not knowing what would be screened; I was among those who did not get in). Much of the discussion is from those who didn't go and have axes to grind against religion and conservatives.

11 posted on 12/09/2003 2:26:02 PM PST by weegee (No blood for ratings! This means YOU AOL-Time-Warner-Turner-CNN)
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To: af_vet_rr
Rough cuts are rarely screened at BNAT but it happens (the year I went Blood Fest 2 was screened prior to some of the film score being added, I believe).

That same year, The Magestic was screened. It was the theatrical print but it had just been "locked" (no more changes) 2 days before the screening (that is probably about as wet a print as you can get).

Everyone knew that ROTK would be screened (and it made sense for Peter Jackson to attend, he had filmed a BNAT intro previously). Harry has been interested in seeing The Passion and it is one of the most anticipated films this season. I think from the way the list was printed, that ROTK played early in the program. The Passion was a curve that the audience was not expecting and the live Q&A from Mel was unexpected too (although special guests at the theater are a standard surprise).

12 posted on 12/09/2003 2:31:47 PM PST by weegee (No blood for ratings! This means YOU AOL-Time-Warner-Turner-CNN)
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To: weegee
I wasn't refering to the talkback forum, but the reviews of the folks who had seen it. This one in particular:

http://www.aintitcool.com/display.cgi?id=16628

It starts out with enough f-words...unitl the reviewer starts talking about the film itself and then his whole tone changes...


...yet he still manages to throw some nasty words in there...

13 posted on 12/09/2003 2:40:20 PM PST by Brian Mosely
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To: Brian Mosely
I hate that I couldn't get into the film that easily because in the back of my mind I kept thinking whether or not every scene involving a jewish person is offensive. At times in the film I think a person could take one or two scenes and blow it totally out of proportion by over-analyzing single lines from jewish characters and then come to the conclusion that the film is anti-semetic.

Sounds like he went in prepared to absolutely hate the film even though Harry had already been somewhat favorable before anyone (including himself) had seen the movie.

I wonder if any of the liberals at Ain't It Cool News went in to see Bowling For Columbine with a big piece of salt prepared for all sort of falsehoods. Or did they just dismiss the political critics in total for that film?

Well... #@%! you Mr. Mass Media for making much ado about nothing.

I could say the same thing about the global media and the antiAmericanWar movement. If that seems an inappropriate comment to make about a movie review site, obviously the FReepers reading this have never seen the off topic political rants on AICN (in movie reviews and in talkbacks).

I consider myself a bit of film-psychotic and so thats what makes me interested in this, so that has me there, sorry Jesus (if you were real).

I can assure this critic (and others) that Jesus was real. The discrepency comes in whether He was the Son of God, reincarnated, etc. If not, then everything He said was false and He was nothing but a kind (rabble rousing) man. If He was who He claimed to be, then it is the most important news in the history of man.

14 posted on 12/09/2003 3:21:03 PM PST by weegee (No blood for ratings! This means YOU AOL-Time-Warner-Turner-CNN)
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To: weegee
BUMP
15 posted on 12/09/2003 4:34:22 PM PST by truthandlife ("Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the name of the LORD our God." (Ps 20:7))
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To: Lady In Blue; Canticle_of_Deborah; Desdemona; Salvation; NYer; Flying Circus; narses
ping
16 posted on 12/09/2003 8:02:11 PM PST by nickcarraway (www.terrisfight.org)
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To: nickcarraway
Thanks!
17 posted on 12/09/2003 8:42:10 PM PST by Lady In Blue (President Bush-"Avenger of the bones....Shiekh of Shiekhs")
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To: JohnHuang2; toddst; Dataman; sola gracia; George Frm Br00klyn Park; JenB; Jerry_M; LibertyBelt; ...
Ping
18 posted on 12/10/2003 4:45:00 AM PST by truthandlife ("Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the name of the LORD our God." (Ps 20:7))
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To: truthandlife
there are now distributors for the United States and Canada and many theaters have agreed to carry the film

That's because they recognize a blockbuster when they see one.
Mel is going to make a ton of money from this movie.
And this is a good thing..no a VERY good thing.
19 posted on 12/10/2003 6:02:28 AM PST by Valin (We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give.)
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To: truthandlife
And another review from anti-cool.

A Catholic & An Athiest review THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST at BNAT 5
Hey folks, Harry here... One of the reasons that I was able to talk Mel Gibson into giving me THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST to screen at Butt-Numb-A-Thon, a film orgy of cosmic proportions, was because of the audience and the way I choose them. Specifically each year I get around 3000 applicants for Butt-Numb-A-Thon. This year I had everyone write a little essay on why they wanted to come, their favorite films, what they do and who they are. THEN - out of those 3000, I pick the 230 people that are the most in love with cinema, that most need the experience of what it is I'm putting together. That need to sit next to who I placed them next to. That are the people that never get chosen for anything, anywhere... or that have amazing luck all the time. The point is to pick, the perfect film going audience, that comes to this tiny theater to see their hopes and dreams. They don't know anything specific. I often say, "Money doesn't get you into Butt-Numb-A-Thon, faith does." That isn't a religious thing, it's about having faith enough in the programming to do what it takes to get in. Mel loved the idea that only the owner of the Alamo Drafthouse and I would know that he and the film would be coming. That the audience would have NO CLUE that they were seeing this. He loved the challenge of his film having to be the last film on an 24 hour period of great cinema. And he wasn't afraid to follow RETURN OF THE KING. Below you'll find two people that absolutely loved the film, but came to the movie from radically different backgrounds. 1st is Saffy. Saffy met her husband in the AICN Chat Room and now lives in Houston with two daughters and was raised Catholic, but could best be described as a lapsed Catholic in some ways. Here ya go...
I don’t normally write reviews. Personally, I don’t usually believe I can because I become so emotional and I lack a lot of technical knowledge about film. Sure, I can go on a diatribe about the importance of Bene-tint to the way they do make-up in period pieces, or how Lucidity foundation paired with cool colored lighting casts an ethereal glow on the skin…but who the hell wants to hear about that? Well OK. Besides me and the cast of Queer Eye.

There are first times for everything, and paired with the first time I am writing a review was the first time I truly got to see what my emotional response to a movie was actually worth. I am going to review The Passion.

The visual look to this film was one part silent movie, one part mystic awakening and one part nightmare. It places you where you need to be, immediately uncomfortable yet familiar enough to go on. Visually this movie stimulates emotionally like nothing out there right now. It creeps…it doesn’t flash in your eyes, it engulfs. The camera doesn’t just film Caviezel, its star. It embraces and caresses him. Even in his darkest hour he expresses such a sense of knowing. Not the typical righteous stoicism we see in the usual film portrayals of Jesus, but a deep sense of spiritual knowing. So that even if you don’t believe in “the Jesus Story,” you can believe that Jesus was someone who possessed an inner quality of peace and forgiveness.

The story takes the Passion (something that I am very familiar with, growing up catholic) and makes it something I could never imagine: it makes it real. We see Jesus’ humanity. That he liked to joke, that he loved his mother, and that he truly suffered. Those turned off by the sometimes pompous, judgmental, “fire and brimstone” vision of Jesus will be able to remove the man from the religion that has built up around his followers. We also see in this movie the pain of his mother, a woman who doesn’t see the supposed blasphemer or messiah, but sees her only son suffer and die. The movie gives a heart to the most unlikely characters, the Romans. We see so much in this move, the political motives for the crucifixion, the dire position people were put in and how this story HAD to enfold like it did. We also see a more female vision of Christianity. The women were the brave followers of Jesus in this film, and were not relegated to a few weeping biddies on the sidelines. They were the ones begging for Jesus, stepping in front of Roman soldiers to give him comfort, the ones weeping at the foot of the cross. Mary, the mother taken off a two dimensional iconic painting and given soul and strength; something movies AND religion have failed to do.

Taking on a movie about Jesus that isn’t pontificating and damning you for all eternity for not believing must’ve been a task unlike any other. No matter what Gibson does with this it is going to offend someone. It has even started to offend those who have never seen it. But guess what? He still did it and he did it majestically. This isn’t an “Onward Christian Soldiers” film. This was a film about a man who spread a message that was misunderstood, and about the people who loved him. The anti-semitism buzz about the film, well I have to address it because there are things that I can see might offend if you don’t step back and realize that almost everyone in the movie is Jewish, from the Pharisees who condemn, to the Pharisees who defend, the apostles who fought, and the man who bravely picked up the cross for Jesus and held him in his pain.

I don’t know how critical I can actually be about this movie because…I wept. It hit me like an emotional anvil and opened up and healed many battle scars I have had with my spiritual convictions. I remembered through this movie that it was all about love and it isn’t the message that turned me off so many years ago but the way the message was presented. The message has been resurrected, the movie made it move and breathe, it made it real yet divine. This is art in its highest form, and even though Mr Gibson claims it’s not finished, it was, in my mind, perfection.

P.S.- Mel Gibson is ICE COLD. I had him all pegged wrong. He is an artist and a DAMN COOL GUY. Keith Richards…oysters…England…PRICELESS!

Ok... so now we move on to Abstruse, here's a sometimes chatter in the AICN Chat that in his initial letter to me to get into BNAT - he bemoaned the fact that he lives in a town where the only theater is owned by a right-wing Christian couple that won't let films like KILL BILL VOL 1 play. That he's never seen a film with a truly great audience and how he wanted to see films that he would never otherwise see. Now I learn he's an atheist to boot... here ya go...
THE PASSION OF CHRIST. Okay, before I say anything else about this film, I want to say something. I am an atheist. I do not believe in god, Jesus, or the bible. I am not a Christian, I am not a Jew, I have no religion. I am also a card-carrying member of the ACLU and a supporter of the ARA (Anti-Racist Action, a youth-based anti-racism organization formed in a retaliation to the neo-nazi movement). I have no ill feelings toward any religion, belief, or race. My best friend is Catholic, my girlfriend is Baptist, my soon-to-be roommate is a Deist, one of my close friends is a Wiccan, and two of my ex-girlfriends are Jewish. When you read this review, remember all this.

The first thing I want to say about PASSION is that this is not a religious film. It’s a film. It’s an amazing, brilliant, incredible film. This is the film that everyone will be talking about in 2004. Unfortunately due to the press, they’re going to be talking about the wrong things.

So far, everyone has asked me if I liked this film. I did not like this film, but I did not dislike this film. I did not love this film, and I did not hate it. This film is beyond those type of descriptions. I cannot say I liked this film. But I can say this is probably one of the most important films – if not THE most important film – of this century so far. If anyone wants to make another grand film, this is going to be the yardstick it’s measured against.

This film is beautiful and ugly, epic and small. And this film is BRUTAL. Christians have turned the phrase “Jesus suffered for your sins” into a cliché. It’s lost all meaning by now. This film does an amazing job of making you KNOW what that phrase means. The MPAA is going to come down on this film like a fucking hammer, but Gibson should show it unrated if they tell him to cut a single frame.

I can’t say this enough about this film. IT IS BRUTAL. There is no way make this clear without actually showing the film. This just cannot be described in words. You can’t call it violent, you can’t call it bloody. It is BRUTAL. That’s the only word. And it NEEDS to be brutal. It needs to make you squirm in your seat for an hour. It needs to make you want to scream at the screen for it to end. It HAS to do these things. If it doesn’t then you can’t understand the point of this film. This film has to transcend the human tolerance for violence and brutality to make its point. And it does. And it works perfectly.

Now, the version we saw of the film wasn’t complete. The score was temporary, some effects weren’t there, and it was a rough cut. Therefore, I’m hesitant to even mention the problems I have with this film as they are all things which will most likely be fixed before it makes it into theaters. The main problem I had at first was the score. The music in the first fifteen to twenty minutes of this film is distracting. Again, since this was probably a temporary sound mix, this problem may not exist in the final form as the music may be much more subdued. The music, however, is very appropriate to the time period of the film, and after those first scenes of the film, the music is great. The only other problem I have is that I feel that the film could be much tighter. Again, though, this was a rough cut, so I can’t say it’s a real problem because a rough cut isn’t supposed to be exceptionally tight as an edit.

My favorite character in this film is Pontius Pilate. You truly understand the position he was in. This was a man who was in charge of this situation, but didn’t want to be. He had a faction that was in power who called for man’s death, and a growing faction who that man led. If he sides with one, then the other will become violent. All he wanted to do was maintain the peace. So he tried to compromise many times. He tried to bribe the faction in power. He tried whatever he could. Finally, he was pushed to where it was either choose one side or the other, so he simply washed his hands of the whole incident. “It is not me who kills this man, but you.” He wanted that made clear. He wanted nothing to do with it, but they forced him into the situation. And it was beautiful.

This brings me to “the controversy”. “Is this film anti-Semitic?” I have one response to this statement. “Are you on crack?” I feel this film is less anti-Semitic than the bible is. Gibson showed the Jews not as a religion or a people, but as a political entity. These weren’t priests of their religion, these were politicians trying to hold onto their power. The only reason someone could call this film anti-Semitic is simply to stir up shit for no reason other than to stir up shit.

This film is amazing. It’s powerful. This film MUST been seen. It doesn’t matter what your religion is, this film is amazing. I just can’t express how important this film will become to cinema history. It doesn’t matter if you follow Jesus or Mohammad, Buddha or Moses, or no prophets at all like myself. This film has to be seen.

The Abstruse One, Jason Byrons
20 posted on 12/10/2003 6:25:16 AM PST by Valin (We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give.)
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