who we are

Free Newsletters

CT Weekly
(weekly)

« Family-friendly horror movies? | Main | Beware the Hair! »

October 6, 2009

'The Great Divorce' to Get Movie Treatment

Film rights to C. S. Lewis's classic fantasy secured by Beloved Pictures

the-great-divorce-2.jpg
Heaven has been depicted on the big screen before, but never quite like this -- as the most beautiful landscape you've ever seen, but every blade of grass is so hard it actually hurts your feet to walk on them, and a single leaf so heavy you can't lift it.

Such is the creative depiction of heaven by C. S. Lewis in The Great Divorce--great fodder for a filmmaker with a rich imagination and a love for the work. And now it appears that the story has found just that.

cunningham.JPG
Beloved Pictures announced Monday that it has secured film rights to the story, and that David L. Cunningham (To End All Wars, Seeker: The Dark Is Rising) will direct. Cunningham, 38, is a Christian and the son of Youth With a Mission co-founders Loren and Darlene Cunningham.

The Great Divorce tells the story of one man's journey--on a bus!--from the post-apocalyptic wasteland of a grey town to the outskirts of heaven.

"We are tremendously excited to bring one of Lewis's most profound stories to the screen," said Beloved Pictures CEO Michael Ludlum. "We believe that this story, much like the Chronicles of Narnia, will resonate with a global audience."

Beloved is currently seeking investors for the film, which may begin filming sometime in 2010. A release date has not yet been determined.

Comments

Haven't seen SEEKER, heard it was dreadful, but TO END ALL WARS was a tremendous, powerful film. Hope Cunningham can deliver.

Actually, it is a modernization of the Divine Comedy, depicting Hell as a grey town. Purgatory is the bus ride and the process of learning to overcome oneself to accept the abject reality of Heaven.

If this film is going to add a Fundamentalist treatment, changing Hell for a "post-apocalyptic city," it will be a travesty and completely change the point of the story.

This is one of my favorites and I can't wait to see it on screen. I have high hopes that it won't get watered down or skewed like some film adaptations of Christian fiction have.

Post a comment:





Verification (needed to reduce spam):

December 2009
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    

shopping