Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade was really a modern Arthurian knight’s tale.
Indy is on a grail quest to become a “true knight” and break the spell of darkness over the land.
Spielberg even gives us one of the best metaphors for “faith” to have ever come out of Hollywood.
Saw Disclosure Day tonight. This clip is being misread.
When Spielberg says confirming UFOs "would mess up a lot of people," he's pointing to one of the film's central themes: how civilization would absorb the shock.
The movie also wrestles with the theological stakes. Would the existence of aliens disprove God? Citing Scripture, a sympathetic Christian character answers plainly: no.
I don't want to give too much away, but the filmmaking is top-notch. More than one scene inspired awe. And it's not hostile toward Christianity. On the contrary, I'd say.
@GiancarloSopo It's really sad how a headline (and a Breitbart version of it) made hundreds (thousands?) of people get offended and it was completely fabricated, even with the video right there with captions.
@TheLaurenChen He’s not saying that aliens have replaced God. He is simply asking if our God is Lord over other universes. People are freaking out for no reason.
@DeaceOnline This movie looks great.
Close Encounters asked some of the same questions and the movie ended up showing respect and honor to Christianity.