Award-winning writer with a special interest in film and faith, and in the Bible movie genre specifically. 'Aqaba is over there. It's only a matter of going.'

Joined December 2008
1,669 Photos and videos
Peter T Chattaway retweeted
Went back to Disclosure Day for a 2nd look. What became painfully apparent was that Spielberg made an analog movie in a digital world. Not a comment on the production. But it’s loaded with old ideas of edge that have since become worn out. In micro, his skills and the skills of the cast and crew deliver. But in macro, it feels like he and the screenwriter just didn’t answer the challenging questions… like why not just put it all online from the start? Or is every chase “find the target… send 5 dark cars.” Drones weren’t a thing in the 80s and 90s. They are ubiquitous now. It feels like a film from someone who really likes what they did. It doesn’t feel like someone overcoming the broken sharks of 2026. It’s an entire movie leading to getting on local broadcast TV.
74
41
615
85,110
I was genuinely surprised by how frozen-in-the-past #DisclosureDay was, what with the legacy media and the US and Russia being on the verge of nuclear war over... Korea. Totally felt stuck in boomer childhood memory no matter *how* many smartphones people were staring at.
2
132
Peter T Chattaway retweeted
Horror is so popular right now because it's a more achievable goal for a divisive humanity. Scared is an easier emotion to aim for than laughter because no one knows what to laugh at anymore. Our entertainment is reduced to our basic limbic system. Fight or flight.
29
25
226
8,198
Angel Studios' #David is now the #4 movie on Netflix. Link in the next tweet.
1
1
104
#ToyStory 5 is the first movie in the series to get a PG rating (for "some thematic elements and rude humor"), rather than a G rating. In the past, "thematic elements" has sometimes been code for political or religious messaging (An Inconvenient Truth, Facing the Giants, etc.).
58
Kewl.
2
42
.@paramountplus Could someone please explain to me why the first season of #StarTrek the original series has just one episode?
76
All of these criticisms of #TheLastJedi are spot-on, but I'm still inclined to cut the movie a *little* slack because it was dealing with a stupid "mystery box" setup bequeathed to the franchise by JJ Abrams in #TheForceAwakens. Rian filled the void badly, but JJ created it.
I've made this point so many times and it never seems to sink in. There are innumerable problems with TLJ, but the biggest by far is this. And the movie's defenders never seem to be able to understand it at all. They'll argue with the strawman version all day, claiming that their taste is more sophisticated and deeper because they like a darker, broken, washed up Luke and anybody who doesn't like it just wants childish levels of moral simplicity. But the OT isn't actually childish in that way. Luke is complex and he has a real arc throughout that story. And because he has a specific and well crafted character arc, when he shows up in TLJ as the polar opposite of the man we knew, that is pretty jarring. It's jarring, not because it's impossible to write a story where Luke went from the hopeful hero who struggled with but ultimately rejects the dark side and redeems his father in the process to a sad husk of a man years later. I might question the wisdom of that direction more than other directions, but I can think of several ways to do it well. That’s never been the problem. The problem is that none of Luke's character change is earned or explained within the film, so it makes zero actual sense. And when I talk to TLJ fans about this, they'll deflect and say that Luke being a hermit is explained by his failures with Kylo as if *that* is the core issue I'm concerned about. It's not. Luke self-imposing exile after trying to kill his own nephew makes some sense. What makes no sense at all is how Luke's entire OT character arc was completely reversed and undone in between RotJ and TFA, such that he'd ever even remotely consider killing his own nephew over a vision (remember how a key part of his early Jedi training involved learning to separate force visions from reality and how he literally lost a hand learning that lesson?), let alone actually begin to take action. No excuse gets you around this problem. All of the the character changes that would have had to have happened leading to Luke having any intent whatsoever of killing Ben and then to display the level of absolute cowardice thar is required for him to run away while he knows Kylo Ren is out there trying to glorify Vader and join the dark side, is just missing from the entire sequel trilogy. There's zero explanation for how Luke went from a hero who wins through refusing to kill his father and who instead offers him charity, compassion, and redemption... To a guy who would get so freaked out by a little nightmare that he tries to kill his nephew and then runs away, leaving him to become Vader 2.0.
106
Marcia Lucas, a key figure in the reinvigoration of 1970s Hollywood -- and one of the co-creators of #StarWars -- passed away the same week a new crop of young filmmakers eclipsed the latest Star Wars movie, which has now itself become a symbol of Hollywood stagnation.
1
84
#TheChosen Season 4 Episode 2 -- the longest episode to date (not counting end credits) features Simon's confession of faith, the "change" to his name, reconciliation between disciples and division within families, and more. Link in the next tweet.
1
1
86
Remember how #SoundofFreedom kicked #IndianaJones's butt three years ago? It's feeling a little like that's what #Backrooms and #Obsession are doing to #StarWars now.
1
73
RT @bazinian_rite: It's been five years since the Kamloops announcement. Among many questionable actors, the @nytimes still has not faced o…
2
The *stunt* performer bit is interesting. If the original film were made today, would David Prowse get credit as the "Darth Vader Suit Performer"?
It is highly irregular for stunt performers to share top billing with the lead actor/actress. How often do you think Pedro was actually on screen during the film?
134
In seven years, #TheMandalorian went from being "the thing that shows #StarWars can still be good, actually, despite the sequel trilogy" to being the latest sign that the franchise is out of life and needs to die.
4
1
15
1,547
This is one thing I love about the Criterion Channel.
One thing I’ve never understood about streaming is that it’s built on “watch hours” yet special features - a thing people love to spend hours watching - haven’t carried over
88
Newsbites: #TheResurrectionoftheChrist gets first-look image, new (summer-movie-season-friendly) release dates; #Testament Season 2 starts shooting; the animated #David comes to Netflix in just a week and a half. Link in the next tweet.
1
111