Welcome to Christ and Pop Culture
Pop Culture is everywhere. We just acknowledge it. Christ and Pop Culture is an attempt to discuss and think rightly about the common knowledge of our age.
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Elsewhere – Noteworthy Links
Newt Gingrich Likes to say “Stupid”
The Rise of Christian Libertarianism?
Lingerie Model Quits for Christ
Creative vs Consumer Culture and SOPA
Asian American Poverty and Ethnic Enclaves
It’s Almost Like This Conference This School Is Organizing was Made For You
Reddit raises $65,000 for a Kenyan orphanage in less than a day
Recent Posts

Citizenship Confusion: Pamela Geller Abuses a Murder“Voices like Robert Spencer and Pamela Geller are very dangerous, particular for Christians and conservatives”

Grace Notes: Dead Can Dance, The Mary Onettes, Saint EtienneDead Can Dance come back from the dead, The Mary Onettes adjust their 80′s sound, and Saint Etienne just want you to dance.

Sacred Space: Superbowl Sunday“Something in the regular life of the church is going to conflict with the Superbowl this Sunday. What ought the church to do?”

Eat Your Vegetables: “The Age of Innocence” (Wharton, 1920)The novel’s tone is thoroughly ironic, as Archer continually misreads as progressive the very traits that consign him to the status quo.

Mixed Signals: What the Christian Message Says to the MassesTargeting a message to your “superfans” doesn’t mean that they are the only ones listening.
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Citizenship Confusion: Pamela Geller Abuses a Murder
Archive

Huh. I can’t believe I didn’t comment on this earlier. My comment is this:
Wow, this blogger doesn’t seem to have a very good grasp on film history if he thinks that the stuff he’s complaining about is in any way a new movement in film-making.
I think he would have found more fertile ground for a post had he thought to engage the question of Why film-makers have come back time and again over the years to the themes of the bildungsroman. What is it about the edge between childhood and adult life that so intrigues us as a society. My guess is that, societally, we feel that that transitional period usually defines who we are for the rest of our lives, so the subtle choices we make at that stage will mark the directional nuance of our more overt choices in later stages.
Of course, if ever film were an examination of this theme, we’d get pretty tired of it. So fortunately for us, only a small handful of these coming-of-age explorartoriums come out in any given year.
As to the question of “Think quickly: what would you rather watch—Russell Crowe trying to escape gladiator life to save his wife and son (in Gladiator), or Owen Wilson annoyingly bossing his brothers around on an Indian train (in The Darjeeling Limited)?“… I didn’t see Darjeeling Limited, but there are so many kinds of movies that I would rather see than a movie about a gladiator trying to escape his life as a gladiator (and I enjoyed Gladiator) that, sure, I’d probably prefer to see the Wes Anderson thingy.
It may be a matter of subtlety.
The Danes last blog post..20080721