"Angels & Demons" Banned From Churches
Rome's Diocese Says Film's Religious Take Contrasts With Common Religious Sentiment
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U.S. actor Tom Hanks walks hand in hand with Israeli actress Ayelet Zurer during the shooting of the movie "Angels and Demons" in downtown Rome, Monday, June 9, 2008. (AP Photo/Riccardo De Luca)
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Producers of the film, directed by Ron Howard and starring Tom Hanks, were turned down because the movie "does not conform to our views," said Monsignor Marco Fibbi, a spokesman for the diocese.
The crew had asked to film in the churches of Santa Maria del Popolo and Santa Maria della Vittoria, two architectural jewels in the heart of Rome that include paintings by Caravaggio, sculptures by Bernini and a chapel designed by Raphael.
Permission was denied in 2007, but the issue surfaced only now that filming is ongoing in Rome, Fibbi said. The Sony-produced film was put on hold during the Writers Guild of America strike that ended in February and is now scheduled for release in May 2009.Photos: On Location "Angels & Demons"
Fibbi's comments first were reported this week by the Italian entertainment magazine "TV Sorrisi e Canzoni.""It's a film that treats religious issues in a way that contrasts with common religious sentiment," Fibbi told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. "We would be helping them create a work that might well be beautiful but that does not conform to our views."
Fibbi acknowledged that the controversy over writer Dan Brown's "The Da Vinci Code" and its blockbuster movie version had weighed on the decision.
The story drew anger and prompted calls for boycotts by church leaders worldwide with the idea that Jesus married and fathered children and by depicting the conservative Catholic movement, Opus Dei, as a murderous cult.
"This is a prequel to 'The Da Vinci Code' and it's clear that the theme is similar," Fibbi said. He added that the ban would not stop the crew from filming the exterior of the churches.
Brown's "Angels and Demons" is a religious thriller combining an ancient secret brotherhood called the Illuminati, code-cracking, a papal conclave and a high-tech weapon threatening to destroy the Vatican.
It features Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon of "The Da Vinci Code" fame, played by Hanks in the movie.
Calls to Sony Pictures in London and Rome were not immediately returned Monday.
By Ariel David
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Photos: On Location "Angels & Demons"



Pretty much says it all right there...If you don''t agree with us, we''ll take our ball and go home.
Sounds like the vatican has gone fascist.
Considering that Jesus was nailed to a cross and didn''t get to write his own version of the story, it is possible that John chose not to mention the wife for various reasons--not the least of which could be her own safety and the safety of the children of Jesus. Doesn''t that make sense?
Now they celebrate this in the town, so somebody went there??
In tracing the origin of the Bible, one is led to AD 325, when Constantine the Great called the First Council of Nicaea, composed of 300 religious leaders. Three centuries after Jesus lived, this council was given the task of separating divinely inspired writings from those of questionable origin.
The actual compilation of the Bible was an incredibly complicated project that involved churchmen of many varying beliefs, in an atmosphere of dissension, jealousy, intolerance, persecution and bigotry.
At this time, the question of the divinity of Jesus had split the church into two factions. Constantine offered to make the little-known Christian sect the official state religion if the Christians would settle their differences. Apparently, he didn''t particularly care what they believed in as long as they agreed upon a belief. By compiling a book of sacred writings, Constantine thought that the book would give authority to the new church.
I won''t therefore take my pick thank you!
And as far as I am concerned the church makes a fool of itself when it confuses fiction with fact. But the church has done that for many years hasn''t it!
By the way, just because you think you have higher-level thinking, doesn''t mean you''re right. It just means that you think you''re better than God. You will regret that decision some day, but it''s your choice.
This country is so self-centered and thinks they are so "enlightened" and yet our value system is so eroded people don''t even know what''s right and wrong anymore. God gives us "free will" to choose to obey him or not.
If you ditch religion (which means you basically ditch God), then what''s the point of life? There is none, zero, zip. I would rather be wrong now by believing in God and following the teachings of Jesus Christ, than to find out I was wrong when I die. Think about it..
But, it is a free country and we can choose what we want...we all just have to play together nicely in the sandbox. And, it is the freedom of the church that allows them to say NO because it conflicts with their beliefs, so lay off the Catholic church.
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Have your 3 boys been molested by a priest yet? Gotta love that Catholic Church with it''s selective beliefs.
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by avigil2
June 17, 2008 5:23 PM EDT
- To dapex: THE DAVINCI CODE was "the worst you''ve ever seen"? Check out MEET THE SPARTANS or EPIC MOVIE or DRILLBIT TAYLOR or THE HOTTIE AND THE NOTTIE. Those might change your mind.
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