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StevieT- 05-21-2007
Amazing Grace Interview
itv.com has a interview with Ioan and Mihael Apted (director) at the following link. You can read and watch it (and there's quite a nice pic of Ioan too..... http://www.itv.com/page.asp?partid=7763

Scotchbonnet- 05-21-2007

Thanks, Stevie. Big happy sigh. Just those few clips brought tears to my eyes. I can't wait to see this film again. Lori

Frances- 05-22-2007

Thanks, Stevie! Nice interview and pic of Ioan. :) You can download the interview converted to a wmv file from here: http://www.mediafire.com/?4uzotwlxusm

maiden- 05-22-2007

Thanks for the download Frances!!

rox_fox- 05-22-2007

Cheers, Frances! Will have to check that out! :mrgreen:

GNAT0629- 05-22-2007

Lovely interview Stevie! Thanks! :razz:

Gaffer'sGirl- 05-22-2007

Great interviews Stevie and Frances. Love that picture and the smile! Thanks, GG

Anonymous- 11-15-2007

What's Amazing about "Amazing Grace" What’s so amazing about “Amazing Grace”? We telephoned director Michael Apted this week to ask him this very question –- and, in a moment, we’ll share with you what he had to say. But, first, you may be wondering why this is such an important question. We’re talking today about the British movie, “Amazing Grace,” released in theaters in February –- and released on DVD this week –- that tells the story of William Wilberforce’s campaign to end the British slave trade. It’s an important question because film critics were widely split on this movie made by Apted, one of the world’s most respected directors, and starring popular Welsh actor Ioan Gruffudd, who is best known to American audiences as the senior figure in the Fantastic Four team of super heroes. More than a few newspaper film critics slammed the film as boring. The Village voice complained that it was “ponderous” and “flat as a pancake.” The Chicago Tribune called it “remote” and “disposable.” The venerable New York Times summoned a more rarefied vocabulary to sniff distastefully that this new Apted film was “part BBC-style biography, part Hollywood-like hagiography” and “wobbles off the historical rails” -– and, if that weren’t enough, it “becomes bogged down in dopey romance.” Owww! That hurts, especially when applied to such creative and inspiring work by one of the most thoughtful directors working in cinema today. You may remember Michael Apted for such finely crafted films as “Coal Miner’s Daughter,” “Gorillas in the Mist: The Dian Fossey Story” –- or even for the James Bond thriller, “The World Is Not Enough.” But his heart and soul rests in telling human tales like the stories of Fossey or country singer Loretta Lynn in “Coal Miner’s Daughter.” In movie history books, he’ll be remembered for something else entirely: His “7 Up” series of documentaries that began following a group of 7-year-old children in 1964 for British television -– and reported on their lives at 7-year intervals ever since. The “7 Up” series is on many film critics’ short lists of top movies of all time –- and, for congregational discussion groups, it could be a terrific choice for an innovative series of classes on aging, personal values and community attitudes. There’s little that’s specifically religious in these every-7-year documentaries, but they say a whole lot about the universal spiritual questions that run through our lives. (Remember: You can click on any book or film cover in our stories -- and you'll jump to our Bookstore, where you can read our reviews and purchase copies, if you wish. So, click on the "Amazing Grace" or "Up Series" DVD covers to learn more.) This brings us back to the Question of the Day about “Amazing Grace” –- in which Apted (shown at right) wanted to examine how one person’s life held the capacity to change deeply entrenched beliefs in society. William Wilberforce essentially began working with a little circle of radical misfits and, by the time he was finished years later, he had peacefully changed the attitudes of a major portion of British society. I telephoned Apted to ask him about his own reflections on the film, close to a year after it debuted in theaters. The negative reviews still sting a bit, apparently. “The film got me into a bit of trouble,” Apted said. “Some people wanted to know: Why isn’t the film more about the evils of slavery, taking us on boats and into Africa and so on? Why isn’t there more action in the film? “But what interested me in the story were the political motives that drove Wilberforce and his gang of supporters into parliamentary action that eventually would destroy slavery.” I said, “Seeing the film in this light, it becomes a pretty strong call to action today.” “Right,” Apted said. “It’s dangerous territory to talk about this, but I do feel that people today are cornering themselves politically. They’re becoming so polarized that it’s dangerous and damaging to the political process itself. “The film about Wilberforce looks at a whole climate of negotiation and consensus that we don’t see today. In Wilberforce’s struggle, positions could change and they did. But, now, people seem to be embedded in positions until they cannot possibly move. It makes me wonder: Are we reaching the end of political process itself? “I think we need to remember people like Wilberforce. We need his kind of bipartisanship that he built.” I said, “He was a model for us in many ways. He also was a pioneer in seeing animals as having spiritual value. He protected animals from the cruelty that was so common in his day.” “Yes,” Apted said, “He was a founding father of this idea. He practiced what he preached. I tried to show this in the film. His houses were always full of animals of all sorts. “He was famous for never being able to get rid of animals, never being able to fire people from his staff, making his house available and open to people even to the point of eccentricity. “He would feed people and sometimes he wouldn’t even know who was in his house for dinner. Often you can accuse religious people of a coldness, when it comes to their fellow countrymen and their neighbors, but Wilberforce had a warmth that existed throughout his entire life.” Many film critics and religion writers did warm to Apted’s film. I wrote a glowing piece about “Amazing Grace” for the Detroit Free Press. The San Francisco Chronicle’s film critic Mick LaSalle, wrote: “Anyone who has ever felt morally right and completely in the minority will have a point of entry into this movie.” And the LA Times’ critic Kenneth Turan captured the film’s power most eloquently. Turan wrote, in part, that this “story of idealism, idealists and speaking truth to power, understands there is something inordinately moving and dramatic about a man who stands up for what is right and makes a difference in this life.” He added, later in the piece, “It is risky, in this cynical and mocking age, to make a determinedly traditional biopic … a film willing to focus on the good that men do in the same way works such as ‘The Life of Emile Zola,’ ‘Madame Curie’ and ‘Wilson’ did in decades past. “Fortunately, director Michael Apted and his team understand the challenges of this kind of story and have met them with intelligence and energy.” We agree! COME BACK TOMORROW for a story about exploring our spiritual roots, when our lives are uprooted in childhood by abandonment or adoption. There's a powerful new movie opening on this theme -- and a great new book for parents helping adopted children in their spiritual quest to find their birth parents. PLEASE, Tell us what you think! Post a Comment on our site. If you're reading this via Email, click on the headline, visit our site and you'll find a Comment link at the end of this article. Or, you can Click Here to email me, David Crumm. http://www.readthespirit.com/explore/2007/11/040-whats-amazi.html

Shipmate- 11-15-2007

Really a lovely review,Annee, and thanks to you other ladies for sharing these materials with us. Enjoyed them very much-----the ones I could see, that is---------

Anonymous- 11-17-2007

Amazing Grace is a historical movie that gives a sweeping account of William Wilberforce's 20-year effort to abolish the British slave trade. But the film, released this week on DVD, also tells a timeless and intimate tale of a man's relationship, and his struggles, with God. "He did have this very clear sense of call, that he was on this monumental task," Bob Beltzer, co-producer of Amazing Grace, said in an interview this week. Wilberforce was born in Yorkshire, England, in 1759, and when his father died was sent to live with an aunt and uncle, both devout Christians. While there he met John Newton, a former slave ship captain who became a minister and wrote one of the most famous hymns of all time, "Amazing Grace." "His mother pulled him out because she thought he was becoming a fanatic," Mr. Beltz said. By the time Wilberforce entered Cambridge at age 21, "he had pretty much lost his faith," he said. Wilberforce lived a hedonistic lifestyle and was elected to Parliament. Then, at age 25, he had a spiritual conversion. Wrestling with whether to stay in politics or pursue the ministry, he sought counsel from Newton and his good friend, future Prime Minister William Pitt. In Amazing Grace, Wilberforce is played by Ioan Gruffudd, who previously starred in The Fantastic Four, and veteran actor Albert Finney plays Newton. Benedict Cumberpatch plays Pitt and Romola Garai is Barbara, Wilberforce's feisty, social-activist girlfriend who becomes his wife. In the film, Pitt advises Wilberforce, "Surely the principles of Christianity lead to action as well as meditation." That quote was taken directly from a letter Pitt had written to Wilberforce, Mr. Beltz said. "A lot of the dialogue was literally lifted out of the historical records," he added. Pitt also challenges Wilberforce with this question: "Will you use your beautiful voice to praise the Lord, or to change the world?" Another example of historically precise lines is Newton's quote, "Two things I remember: I am a great sinner and Christ is a great savior." Mr. Beltz said those were Newton's last words. Another memorable line delivered by Newton comes when, literally blind in his old age, he cites one of his most famous lyrics, giving the spiritual metaphor new impact: "I once was blind, but now I see." Mr. Beltz, who was a pastor for 25 years before overseeing film development for the Anschutz Film Group, said Wilberforce's dilemma over whether to stay in his secular career or join the priesthood represents the struggle many people face when trying to determine God's will for their lives. "I can remember early on being exposed to Wilberforce's model, that you don't have to be called into the clergy to be called into ministry," Mr. Beltz said. Wilberforce not only struggled with tough political battles, he also battled serious health problems. His doubts and frailty rise to the fore after one of the abolition bills he fought so hard for was soundly defeated, saying in anguish, "I was chosen for this part and I failed." Despite the setbacks, Wilberforce never gave up, and sometimes resorted to unorthodox methods to make a point. He set up a sailing excursion for members of Parliament and their wives, for example, wining and dining them while a chamber orchestra played background music until the ship suddenly pulled alongside the Madagascar. It's a slave ship, Wilberforce tells the shocked politicians, and it has just returned from West Indies. When it left, there were 600 slaves aboard, but only 200 survived the journey. That smell is smell of death, he tells the horrified MPs. In one of the climactic scenes, after his political foes claimed that Wilberforce stood virtually alone in his quest to stop the slave trade, he unfurls a petition across the Parliament floor, signed by thousands of people calling for abolition. Among the special features on the Amazing Grace DVD are study guides and discussion tools on Wilberforce's life, the history of slavery, and relevant Bible verses. Mr. Beltz has written a companion guide, titled World Changers, that for now is available only at Wal-Mart stores. More information on Wilberforce and Amazing Grace, including downloadable study guides, is available online at www.amazingracemovie.com and www.world-changers.info. - David Yonke http://toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071117/NEWS10/711170359

Shipmate- 11-17-2007

I want to especially thank you, Annee, for this particular article, because it comes from my hometown newspaper!!!! I'm glad to see that the good people of Toledo will be seeing this very nice review while drinking their morning coffee.

StevieT- 12-13-2007

Here's quite a nice interview from MSN (not new, I'm afraid, but worth watching for Ioan's discussion of playing Wilber), interspersed with clips. http://movies.uk.msn.com/video.aspx?suffixurl=/mymovies/ASF_ROOT/FilmMedia/film/fid4594/features/avfid6618/wm/bb.asf

Frances- 12-14-2007

Nice to see this interview with Ioan talking about AG. Thanks for sharing, Stevie. I see if I can capture it.

StevieT- 02-16-2008

I know this isn't new, but I thought it was worth a second read; it kind of sums up all his recent movies (let me know if it's been posted in another thread - a search couldn't find it, but it is familiar, soooo....:roll:) http://www.moviepicturefilm.com/inter.php?itemid=1111

Frances- 02-16-2008

I can't recall ever reading this interesting interview before, though it is not new. Thanks for sharing, Stevie.

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