Showing posts with label Brooklyn Bridge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brooklyn Bridge. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

How to Use Films to Express Your Faith - STEVE YOUNT/A. LARRY ROSS CHARISMA NEWS

Adam Lavorgna in Masterless

Adam Lavorgna in Masterless (youTube)


How to Use Films to Express Your Faith



Join us on the new C-Pop podcast where Taylor and Jessilyn discuss, debate and sometimes deride pop culture with a strong sense of humor and a focus on Christ. Listen at charismapodcastnetwork.com.
The creators of Masterless, a movie that mixes problems from the 21st century with imagery from feudal Japan to tell a timeless story of faith, have launched a YouTube channel to help viewers gain an greater understanding of how the film can be used as a tool to discuss challenging concepts of faith. 
The launch of the YouTube channel coincided with the home-entertainment release of the film. The DVD can be purchased at Walmart stores or ordered at amazon.com and christiancinema.com. Movie fans also can watch the film via streaming video on iTunes and video on demand on DISH TV, DIRECTV and Comcast, among other outlets. 
Each episode is narrated by Masterless star Adam LaVorgna (7th HeavenBrooklyn Bridge) and concludes with a series of discussion questions designed to engage those who may not practice the Christian life. 
"We wanted to do this because of the allegorical nature of the story," director/writer Craig Shimahara said. "When people of faith understand the symbolism, the movie and the YouTube channel together become a meaningful resource." 
Masterless has received high praise at independent film festivals, including being named the "Best Overall Feature" at the 2015 Fort Worth Indie Film Showcase. 
LaVorgna plays the dual role of two lost souls searching for meaning: Kane Madison, an architect in Los Angeles whose master is his work, and his spiritual counterpart, an 18th-century Ronin, a samurai with no lord or master, who is wandering a netherworld of masked demons and Japanese swordsmen. 
On his journey, the Ronin encounters many obstacles, including a mysterious madam played by Kaho Minami, a well-known Japanese actress and the wife of actor Ken Watanabe, in her first English-speaking role. 
The film is Shimahara's first full-length feature, and he sets the contemporary story in the competitive world of architectural design, a field he knows intimately as the owner of an architectural illustration firm, Shimahara Illustration, in Los Angeles. 
Shimahara Illustration produced all of the visual effects for the film. A team of more than 30 artists in three time zones worked for a year to digitally create all of the "Spirit World" backdrops for more than 600 green screen shots. 
The filmmakers discovered the Japanese armor worn by the characters in the film at the Warner Bros. wardrobe storehouse. It was originally designed for the 2003 epic,The Last Samurai, starring Tom Cruise and Watanabe.
For a limited time, we are extending our celebration of the 40th anniversary of Charisma. As a special offer, you can get 40 issues of Charisma magazine for only $40!
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Saturday, September 7, 2013

Holiday in New York City - Rosh Hashanna - 1900's

Israel's History - a Picture a Day (Beta)


Posted: 03 Sep 2013 06:39 PM PDT

Tashlich prayer on the Brooklyn Bridge, 1909.
The Near Year prayer is traditionally said at a body
of water where the worshipper "casts" his/her sins
Israel Daily Picture normally focuses on pictures of the Holy Land in the Library of Congress archives' American Colony collection.  

In honor of Rosh Hashanna, we present pictures of the holiday in New York City, taken in the early 1900s by George Bain and also housed in the Library of Congress archives.

Jewish boy in prayer shawl on Rosh Hashanna (1911)









Tashlich prayer on the Brooklyn bridge (1919)






Jews praying on the Jewish New Year (circa 1905)
















Rosh Hashanna worshippers (1907)











Tashlich on the Brooklyn Bridge (1909)













Going to prayers (circa 1910)








Going to synagogue (circa 1910)






Selling New Year's cards, East Side, New York City (1910)



"New Year's Parade" (1912)












Jewish New Year's nap, East Side (1912)