Showing posts with label Kevin Downes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kevin Downes. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Thousands of teens accept Christ after watching 'Woodlawn' - CHRISTIAN EXAMINER


Prestonwood Baptist Church, Dallas/YouTube/SCREEN SHOT
Thousands of teens have made decisions for Christ after watching Woodlawn. Here teens from a local Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) chapter, respond to an invitation after a viewing at Prestonwood Baptist Church in Dallas.

Thousands of teens accept Christ after watching 'Woodlawn'

by Michael Foust | 

LOS ANGELES (Christian Examiner) – Thousands of teens nationwide have accepted Christ after watching "Woodlawn," the football-themed faith-based film that is heading into its second weekend in theaters, officials with the film say.
On its first weekend in Los Angeles, more than 900 teens and students gave their lives to Christ, said Kevin Downes, the movie's producer.
"There are kids coming to Christ all over the place," Downes told the Christian Examiner. "In Los Angeles, we've had the Fellowship of Christian Athletes along with a lot of the rest of the area really step up, being the hands and feet of the body of Christ. It's been really cool to see."
But even before the movie opened, the movie was having an impact. Director Jon Erwin said that during a screening at Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano, Texas, hundreds of teens came forward to take a stand for Christ. A video of that event was posted on YouTube.
"To see kids respond to it the way they are has been unbelievable," Erwin told the Christian Examiner. "We hope that continues."
But those aren't the only stories. For example, 125 athletes accepted Christ on the campus of West Texas A&M in Canyon, Texas, in early October during a screening.
"It was like the Holy Spirit just blew a huge breath right at me and blew me away," FCA representative and athletic chaplain Pat Ford told the Woodlawn movie blog. About 250 students were in attendance. "Over half of our group immediately stood up [and accepted a call to stand for Christ]. To God be the glory."
Nationwide, churches and Christians groups such as FCAs have bought theater tickets in bulk, allowing athletes and teens to watch the movie for free.
The movie was well received by moviegoers, earning a rare A+ CinemaScore in exit polling, and has also achieved high praise from mainstream critics – a rarity for a faith-based film. At the aggregate website RottenTomatoes.com, 89 percent of critics gave it a positive review. That includes critics from Variety, The Los Angeles Times and Hollywood Reporter.
"The critics are respecting the quality of the filmmaking, and we're just being unashamed with the Gospel," Downes said. "We definitely stepped up the production budget, and it shows with the movie, but we're not watering down the storyline whatsoever."

Friday, February 14, 2014

Amazing Love: Authentic Movie Making in Israel

Amazing Love: Authentic Movie 
Making in Israel

CBN News, Chris Mitchell


NAZARETH VILLAGE, Israel -- You might not realize it, but most movies about the Bible are not made in the Holy Land, something that just may be changing.

The feature film, "Amazing Love," is a retelling of the Prophet Hosea and his unfaithful wife, Gomer. It begins with a modern-day dilemma, when a youth pastor, played by Sean Astin, deals with a young girl consumed with herself.

In one scene, one girl says to another, "Hey Ashley, we're only going to be here for the weekend. Do you need all that luggage?"


To which she responds, "I couldn't decide what to wear."

"Amazing Love" is being shot in the center of the modern-day city of Nazareth and in a recreation of what Nazareth would have looked like 2,000 years ago, Nazareth Village.

The film's producer, Daryl Lefever, told CBN News he's taken with the authenticity of the sets.

"Shooting here in the Village? The sets speak for themselves -- the facility to be able to shoot real stones and real mud. Things are built together by hand and hewn out of rock by guys with chisels, whom we meet," Lefever said. "Nothing here is not authentic. Everything is made here the same way it would have been 2,000 years ago."

Director Kevin Downes, who starred in the movie "Courageous," said he started to dream the first time he came to Israel.
Director Kevin Downes

"So as a filmmaker, my mind started to spin and I started thinking, 'Man, could you shoot a movie here? Could you make a story here? Because it would be so impactful," he recalled.

Now Downes has discovered the joy of making a movie in Israel, the land where Jesus walked.

"So actually it was my life's passion, so when we shot our first shot, which was last week on the Sea of Galilee, it was 6:48 a.m. I remember the time," he said.

"And I sat there and a tear came down my cheek because I felt like it was a dream come true from like 19 years that I've been doing this. I'm now filming a movie right where Jesus walked -- right in God's Holy Land," he said.

Gary Bayer said filming here in Israel is "life changing."

"You know the one line that just keeps coming to mind, the word I've heard over and over is 'life changing,'" he told CBN News.

Downes got help for the film from Gary Bayer. Bayer and his wife, Cindy, started "Writer's Gathering," an organization that brings filmmakers and storytellers to Israel, which they call the "Cradle of Creativity."

"We bring them here in hopes that they will feed that well from which they write…or they will decide, 'I'm going to bring my film here,'" he explained. "And that is actually grown to the point where writers are now bringing their films here and this is the place where we host them here."

"We scout for them," he continued. "They'll shoot either along here or in the Golan, the north shore. They'll go to Nazareth to the whole restored village of Nazareth, so it's a great place to capture [a] story."

But what about the dangers of filming in Israel?

"It's strange at first when you think about shooting in Israel because you know you read the news you think it must be high tension there or be this crazy place you wouldn't want to come to and be dealing with all this stuff. It's really not that," Lefever said. "From the moment I got off the plane, I was like, 'This is beautiful. Why didn't I come here on vacation?'"

Downes hopes to shoot another film in Israel, and he has a message for other filmmakers.

"Every filmmaker in our space has a Bible story in the back of their mind," he said. "And I'm going to encourage them, you know, pray about it and seek God's guidance to maybe bring you over here."