BBC doesn't block this, so I could upload the entirety to Youtube, as well as anyone else can it seems as many people have this movie uploaded on their channels.
No forced "diversity", there's no woke values, it's a faithful adaption of C.S Lewis' book with the gospel message in tact. Is it any wonder why the BBC doesn't care to claim this movie?
Regarding the Disney abomination, after I read the Chronicles of Narnia about 5 or so years ago, and having grown up with this version and swearing I'd never watch the Disney version, I caved and just wanted to see how they adapted it.
They pretty much secularized it.
The instance I remember is in the BBC adaption, it faithfully has the line from the book when the curse of winter is going away something like "Aslan's presence is bringing hope back to the world" or something like that.
Well in the Disney movie the line goes "The children have brought hope back to the land".
Aslan of course being an allegory for Jesus, they turned a story that is Christ-centric to humanist-centric.
That was the one that I remember, but I remember just being left with a bad taste in my mouth after having read the book recently.
BBC doesn't block this, so I could upload the entirety to Youtube, as well as anyone else can it seems as many people have this movie uploaded on their channels.
Everyone is white, there's no woke values, it's a faithful adaption of C.S Lewis' book with the gospel message in tact. Is it any wonder why the BBC doesn't care to claim this movie?
Regarding the Disney abomination, after I read the Chronicles of Narnia about 5 or so years ago, and having grown up with this version and swearing I'd never watch the Disney version, I caved and just wanted to see how they adapted it.
They pretty much secularized it.
The instance I remember is in the BBC adaption, it faithfully has the line from the book when the curse of winter is going away something like "Aslan's presence is bringing hope back to the world" or something like that.
Well in the Disney movie the line goes "The children have brought hope back to the land".
Aslan of course being an allegory for Jesus, they turned a story that is Christ-centric to humanist-centric.
That was the one that I remember, but I remember just being left with a bad taste in my mouth after having read the book recently.