Wilhelm-Scream
Avenger
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A problem with your perception.but you sound like you could benefit from being taken down a peg every once in a while. you've easily got the biggest ego on these boards.
Why, just yesterday, I totally totally went off on sandman138 based on my complete misunderstanding of his post.
I was wrong, very wrong, and then I laughed, at myself, because I was so extremely wrong that it was amusing.
If I'm wrong, I'll happily admit my fallibility. It's just that I'm almost never wrong.
Anyway, he has, for a fact, proclaimed that his novels are about killing God.
He has, for a fact said,
"I hate the Narnia books. I hate them with a deep and bitter passion, with their view of childhood as a golden age from which sexuality and adulthood are a falling away." He has called the series "one of the most ugly and poisonous things" he's ever read.
Both of those statements would also alienate fans, but he's outspoken.
AND, I am definitely not the only one who interpreted the statement the way in which it makes sense:
League President Bill Donohue said: "Eighty-five per cent of the people in this country are Catholic or Protestant and I'd like them to stay at home, or go see some other movie.
"Pullman is using this film as a sort of stealth campaign. He likes to play the game that he's really not atheistic and anti-Catholic. But yes he is and we have researched this.
British author Philip Pullman has proclaimed that his novels are about killing God.
The author has described himself in interviews as both an atheist and an agnostic, and he has been quoted as saying his writing is about killing God and trying to undermine the basis of Christian belief. He wrote the His Dark Materials trilogy as a response to the popular The Chronicles of Narnia, a childrens fantasy tale by C.S. Lewis that is woven with Christian themes.
The film is based on the first book of a trilogy by Philip Pullman, an atheist who has expressed his disdain for Christianity and who, in the course of his three books, has the protagonista young girl named Lyrajoin people who are trying to kill God and the Christian faith and they succeed. Many Christians have expressed their concerns regarding the film.
I am trying to undermine the basis of Christian belief, Philip Pullman told the Washington Post for a piece published in February of 2001.
The Narnia stories of Lewis had been written to show how Jesus might look in another world. And it is said that Pullman despises them, calling them racist, misogynistic and devoid of love.
It's freakin' obvious.
