Darwin Biopic Sees Hope in Newmarket Film Distributor

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Apparently all the crocodile tears have paid off for the Charles Darwin docu/drama producer.  After several weeks of public whining about how American Christians had Hollywood film distributors trembling in fear over marketing, Creation: the True Story of Charles Darwin, an ‘independent’ film distributor has signed on: Newmarket Films.

It’s not unexpected.  If you generate controversy, they will come!

The Irish Times article below is a gushing piece of PR propaganda that now moves into stage two of hyping what is a boring film.  Watch as the reviews getting increasing positive about the cinematic and directing greatness of this docu/drama.  (Without the drama!)  As indicated in a previous post, the parallels between the promotion and marketing of  “Inherit the Wind” and “Creation” are striking…

Perfect timing for the November 24 On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life celebrations.

Pretty soon PZ Myers will be calling for an Academy Award for the film!

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Natural selection
by Donald Clarke
Irish Times, The Ticket (Ireland), p. 8-9
September 25, 2009

GIVEN THE recent efforts by evangelical slope-brows to portray Charles Darwin as a combination of Adolf Hitler and the Child Catcher from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, it was, perhaps, important that the makers of Creation find a likeable fellow to play the old naturalist.

Hello, Paul Bettany. A few years back, Richard Loncraine, who directed Paul in the ropey Wimbledon, told me that the legendarily amiable Michael Palin was the only actor who could compare with Bettany for all-round niceness.

Sure enough, after finishing work on Creation, a study of Darwin’s lengthy procrastination before publication of On the Origin of Species, Mr Bettany did the decent think and visited the creationist heartland.

“Yes, after making the movie I went to Kentucky and spent a day at the Creation Museum,” he confirms. “Look, if I spent a day there, I think it’s fair to ask creationists to spend an hour and 45 minutes watching this film. Is that reasonable?”

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Telling Lies for Darwin

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It seems the new film about the family life of Charles Darwin, Creation: the True Story of Charles Darwin, is already generating controversy.

The all too predictable pajama bloggers such as PZ Myers and even film critic Roger Ebert are beginning to stoke the flames of controversy over the film’s premier at the Toronto International Film Festival. But it all really started with a rather breezy article in the UK’s Telegraph: Charles Darwin film ‘too controversial for religious America’.

Telegraph “Showbusiness editor” Anita Singh (as opposed to ‘journalist’) says:

However, US distributors have resolutely passed on a film which will prove hugely divisive in a country where, according to a Gallup poll conducted in February, only 39 per cent of Americans believe in the theory of evolution.

How does she know it was “too controversial for religious America”? The Telegraph does not offer ANY proof. Not even a quote from a film distributor. This is just a cheap stereotype probably being used to garner publicity and support for what may well turn out to be a dull film.

Perhaps including the Gallup Poll is proof enough. This is truly a leap of logic that only a “Showbusiness editor” could make!

Besides, American film makers and distributors have no problem marketing films that offend the sensibilities of religious people in the U.S or elsewhere. One need only check the weekly movie listings for evidence of this.

Could it be the film will be a flop?  Even PZ Myers struggled to say anything positive about the film…and he most likely hasn’t even seen it:

Although, to be fair, this is only part of the story. One reason it probably isn’t getting picked up is that it isn’t a blockbuster story — it’s a small film with a personal story. That’s not to say it’s a bad movie, but it’s not a Michael Bay noisemaker with car chases and explosions, or giant robots, or a remake of a 1970s cheesy TV show. That makes it a tougher sell.

Also, while it’s going to generate a little controversy from the know-nothing brigades, it’s not a movie that embraces the controversy and makes a lot of PR waves. I suspect it’s falling into the valley of the dead movies, where it’s got just enough negative vibe to turn away a segment (a small, stupid segment, of course, but theaters don’t care about the IQ of the people buying popcorn) of the population, but not enough shock value to make it a must-see movie for the controversy alone.

Film critic Roger Ebert (who hero worships Darwin and has been attacking creationists in the past year) notes that people were walking out of the press screen showing!  Apparently it was a boring film.  Very revealing is his comment that he hopes it wasn’t from boredom they walked out.

Maybe the U.S. film distributors know something we don’t know – it’s a box office disaster and will lose money. Certainly not because it’s “controversial for religious America.” The market is probably the History Channel or a PBS broadcast. Something for the wine and cheese crowd or local atheist clubs…

Like the play and movie Inherit the Wind, we now have another Hollywood history brainwashing.  But in this instance, from the United Kingdom…

As a final note, another film showing at the Toronto International Film Festival is “Antichrist.” It’s not had any problem getting a U.S. film distributor. It is much more controversial than “Creation”:

Lars von Trier’s “Antichrist” is poised to detonate at the Toronto Film Festival. This willfully controversial director will inspire, as he often does, a storm of controversy, debate, critics clamoring to get into advance screenings that are already jammed, and a contentious press conference. Of the 400 or so films at TIFF this year, “Antichrist” was the first that sold out in advance. It was the same last May at Cannes, and that was before it has even been seen.

“Von Trier was nothing if not canny in his title for the film. By naming it “Antichrist,” he provides a lens through which to view its perplexing behavior. By naming his characters only He and She, he suggests the dark side of an alternative Garden of Eden, and then disturbing his ending becomes a mirror image of Christ welcoming the faithful into the kingdom of heaven. The title instructs us where to begin. If he had named the characters John and Mary, and titled the film “A Nightmare,” what conclusions might we have arrived at?

It even has two versions – one for Catholics and one for Protestants. 

(NOTE:  even some liberals were repulsed by the graphic sexual & mutilation scenes in this film.)

I rest my case…

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The Creation of Planetary Magnetic Fields

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CRSQ21no3by D. Russell Humphreys
CRS Quarterly, Volume 21, Number 3, December 1984, pp. 140-149.

Abstract:
God could have started magnetic fields in the solar system in a very simple way: by creating the original atoms of the planets with many of their nuclear spins pointing in the same direction. The small magnetic fields of so many atomic nuclei add up to fields large enough to account for the magnetism of the planets. Within seconds after creation, ordinary physical events would convert the alignment of nuclei into a large electric current circulating within each planet, maintaining the magnetic field. The currents and fields would decay steadily over thousands of years, as Barnes has pointed out. The present magnetic field strengths of the Earth, Sun, Moon, and planets agree very well with the values produced by this theory and a 6000-year age for the solar system. This theory is consistent with all the known data and explains many facts which have puzzled evolutionists.

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A Hollywood (UK) History of Charles Darwin

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Now that fall is rapidly approaching, evolutionists are gearing up for phase two of the 2009 Darwin celebrations: the November 24th 150 year anniversary of the publication of “On the Origin of Species.”

Now there will be a another movie, along with the propaganda film “Inherit the Wind,” to show in public schools around the world:  “Creation: the True Story of Charles Darwin.”   One can only imagine what another Hollywood ‘history’ will contribute to brainwashing the next generation with revisionist history.

For additional information about the movie visit the website.

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latimescreationdarwinScience, emotion clash in ‘Creation’
Nev Pierce
Los Angeles Times,  p. D4.
September 6,  2009

Almost 50 years after the Scopes “Monkey” trial received the Hollywood treatment in the original “Inherit the Wind,” the eternal friction between science and religion is back on the big screen with “Creation,” which opens the Toronto International Film Festival on Thursday. The British period drama tells the story of how 19th century naturalist Charles Darwin wrote his revolutionary book “The Origin Of Species” while facing opposition from his devout Christian wife and struggling with grief over the death of his eldest daughter.

It was a difficult time in young Darwin’s life, both personally and professionally. When he first advanced his groundbreaking theory that animals, including humans, evolved from common ancestors, he was challenging centuries of consensus between religious and scientific thinkers. Until that point, it was broadly accepted that life in all its complexities and forms was simply too intricate to have arisen naturally. But Darwin had painstakingly detailed the process of natural selection, showing how it was indeed possible, even probable, that nature was her own maker, concepts that have remained central to modern scientific thinking. Nevertheless, the creation evolution dispute marches on, and the discussion now includes the theory of intelligent design, which blends science with biblical accounts to argue that God’s hand may be the guiding force behind the natural processes of evolution.

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Creation History Project Wiki Returns

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Last month, the server hosting this blog and several other related sites including a mail server, had a catastrophic hard drive crash. With the exception of the mail server and the Creation History Project wiki, everything was back up and running within a few days. Unfortunately the wiki database was on the drive that crashed. And, of course, there was no backup of the wiki database!

The good news is that thanks to Google’s page cache feature, and a very nifty html to mediawiki format converter, the Creation History Project wiki is back up this week with only very minor changes missing.

What makes this an even better story is the upgrade to 32 GB Ultra 360 15K SCSI hard drives…that have been gathering dust since June! Besides two very fast HD’s, all the software has been upgraded to the latest versions: Apache, PHP, MySQL, WordPress, and MediaWiki.

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Theistic Evolutionists in USA Today

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Two of the more vocal theistic evolutionists let loose on creationists and Answers in Genesis’ Creation Museum. (Read Ken Ham’s blog post about theistic evolutionists and his online debate with Giberson on beliefnet.com!)

They have apparently teamed up with another theistic evolutionist, Francis Collins, to lend their voices to undermining the Bible…

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USATodayGibersonWe believe in evolution — and God
By Karl Giberson and Darrel Falk
USA TODAY US Edition, p. 7A.
August 10, 2009

The “conflict” between science and religion in America today is not only unfortunate, but unnecessary. We are scientists, grateful for the freedom to earn Ph.D.s and become members of the scientific community. And we are religious believers, grateful for the freedom to celebrate our religion, without censorship. Like most scientists who believe in God, we find no contradiction between the scientific understanding of the world, and the belief that God created that world. And that includes Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution.

Many of our fellow Americans, however, don’t quite see it this way, and this is where the real conflict seems to rest.

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A Decade of Creationist Research, Pt. 1 and 2

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by Duane T. Gish
CRS Quarterly, Volume 12 Number 1, June, 1975, pp. 34-46.

Abstract:
The primary purpose of the Creation Research Society is to carry out, or to encourage, Creationist research in the natural sciences, and to publish the results of such research. By Creationist research is meant research which proceeds from a belief in, and attempts to correlate with, special Creation. It is shown that, in about the last ten years, a significant amount of research has been accomplished. It has been done, moreover, at very little expense, and, as far as is known, with no expenditure whatever of public money. While reference is made especially to the Creation Research Society, it is known that good work has been done outside the Society. No claim is made that this list of research is complete. It is probably impossible to list everything which has been done; and some work is not included mainly because it was difficult to fit it under any particular heading. It is clear, from what is reported here, that Creationist research is a worthwhile activity. There is, of course, much more to be done; and it is hoped that many more people who are able to do research will come forward.

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Neandertal DNA and Modern Humans

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by Daniel Criswell
CRS Quarterly, Volume 45 Number 4, Spring, 2009, pp. 246-254.

Abstract:
The variation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) between modern humans and Neandertal sequences lie outside the mtDNA sequence variation within modern humans. This variation has led several researchers to conclude that Neandertals did not contribute to modern human DNA and are a separate species that went extinct in Europe. It is feasible that DNA can be retrieved from specimens that died thousands of years ago, given the ideal preservation conditions and extraction protocols. However, DNA also decays as the organism decomposes. Spontaneous hydrolysis, oxidation, and nucleotide modifications are a few of the processes that cause DNA decay and likely interfere with reliably obtaining a mtDNA sequence that accurately reflects the Neandertal mtDNA sequence.

In addition to DNA decay, contamination of samples is also apparent in published Neandertal mtDNA sequences. A comparison of conserved sequence block 2 (CSB2) in hypervariable region II (HVRII) between Neandertal mtDNA and modern man, primates, and other mammals indicate that excess thymine in CSB2 of published Neandertal mtDNA is likely the result of contamination.

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