While this pitch may ring as a bit too Protestant - sounding in Catholic ears and weakens
the clear message of the film to some extent, it is nevertheless admirable to see someone on the street inviting passers - by to faith in Jesus Christ.
Not exact matches
Thomas Trask, the Assemblies
of God top administrator, commends the
film for its «
clear salvation
message,» and others see it as a way
of telling about Jesus in a straightforward manner.
The choice to feature that authentic footage doubles as a
clear gesture
of what the
film's
message and intent is and regardless
of repeated references to Holocaust.
The
message in their
film is loud and
clear, never shying away from asking the question
of — What would you do for fame?
It is only in the
film's concluding moments — a punchline
of sorts which I dare not spoil here — that the
message of «Phantom Thread» becomes remotely
clear.
By the time the finale
of the
film begins to become
clear and you realize what the full
message is going to be, it might hit you really hard.
Comprising archive footage and first - hand accounts, Claire Ferguson's
film feels vital in sharing harrowing stories
of life in concentration camps, while the
message is
clear: even 70 years later, these survivors will never be fully free.
Over and over again, the
clearest message in both parts this
film is that it's an individual, a group
of individuals or an organization that makes the difference.
The
message of the
film is
clear.
The band uses music, drawings and
films to spread a
clear message of love in a beautiful, tsuristic, anti-natural, fearless and happy way to dispel the antiquated notion that there is a hierarchy
of artistic mediums.
The
message of the
film was firm and academically
clear: There is no human - induced climate change.