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  • The Nativity Story
    The Nativity Story

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    Director: Catherine Hardwicke
    Actors: Keisha Castle-hughes, Oscar Isaac, Hiam Abbass, Shaun Toub, Ciaran Hinds
    Studio: New Line Home Video
    Category: DVD

    List Price: $19.98
    Buy Used: $7.58
    You Save: $12.40 (62%)



    New (40) Used (21) Collectible (1) from $7.58

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 198 reviews
    Sales Rank: 882

    Format: Ac-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
    Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled)
    Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
    Running Time: 101 minutes
    Number Of Items: 1
    Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6

    MPN: TRNDN10668D
    UPC: 794043106682
    EAN: 0794043106682
    ASIN: B000MGBM1I

    Theatrical Release Date: December 1, 2006
    Release Date: March 20, 2007
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
    Condition: 85 includes original case

    Similar Items:

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      • The Ultimate Gift
      • The Gospel of John

    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    A drama that focuses on the period in mary & josephs life where they journeyed to bethlehem for the birth of jesus. Studio: New Line Home Video Release Date: 09/30/2008 Starring: Keisha Castle-hughes Hiam Abbass Run time: 101 minutes Rating: Pg

    Amazon.com
    The Nativity Story is a remarkable, if frustratingly restrained, act of imagining the tale of Christ's birth as a flesh-and-blood drama actually set in Israel two millenia ago. Written by Mike Rich (Finding Forrester) and directed by Catherine Hardwicke (Thirteen), the film makes very strong impressions in a scene-by-scene way. Beginning with the slaughter (bloodlessly portrayed; this is a PG movie) of Bethlehem's innocents under orders from a paranoid King Herod (a dark and knowing Ciaran Hinds), the film then jumps back a year to the prophecy that informs Zechariah (Stanley Townsend) that his wife, Elizabeth (Shohreh Aghdashloo), will bear a child. Meanwhile, Elizabeth's cousin, the adolescent Mary (Keisha Castle-Hughes), struggles with her family to make ends meet and is promised to the carpenter Joseph (Oscar Isaac). Soon comes word to Mary, via an angel, that she will carry, while still a virgin, the long-awaited Messiah who will liberate the Jews from Herod and his Roman benefactors. Thus begins a detailed account of Joseph and Mary's hard travel to Bethlehem, while three Magi spend months crossing the desert trying to rendezvous with some point below the convergence of three heavenly bodies in the night sky. Hardwicke and Rich anchor all this in period detail, though what proves most moving are relationship nuances, especially the friendship and trust that emerge between Mary and Joseph after he is told in a dream that she speaks truthfully about her miraculous pregnancy. While The Nativity Story should appeal to almost anyone as a straightforward narrative, it is far from a secular version of the familiar Biblical tale, and thus feels a bit stifled. It might have been nice if the film could have breathed a little more with imagination, but The Nativity Story makes up for it by ingeniously weaving hints of things to come, later in Christ's life, into the action. --Tom Keogh


    Customer Reviews:   Read 193 more reviews...

    5 out of 5 stars Great Film   January 8, 2009
    The Nativity Story (2006) is a great movie that begins with the slaughter of Bethlehem's first born under orders from King Herod. The movie takes you to Mary's house where she is met by an angle proclaiming that she will be the mother of the Messiah. Joseph and Mary's journey begins.It's a great story of hope.
    If you would like to read a great book that will being you hope read "The Enlightenment, What God Told Me After One Million Prayers: A Message for Everyone," by John H. Eagan. In this day and age it's like a glimmer of hope in a dark world.



    5 out of 5 stars The real story   January 7, 2009
    This is a really good movie that shows the birth of Jesus without the Hollywood-style story changing that was so common in a lot of movies when I was growing up. If you are Christian, this is a must watch every Christmas.


    4 out of 5 stars Good moviue % quick srvice   January 6, 2009
    Good move, one of the best nativity move so fare. Good quick service... stander mailing.


    4 out of 5 stars The Nativity Story   January 6, 2009
    This is a very lovely story and the venue was very appropriate for a child of 5 years old. She thoroughly enjoyed this gift. The story of Christ's birth and history of his being was portrayed in a beautiful and moving way.




    3 out of 5 stars Pious, yet flat retelling   December 29, 2008
    There's little in "The Nativity Story" that would give even the most pious Christian the slightest case of reflux. Mary (Keisha Castle-Hughes) is pouty, but generally obedient to her parents. Joseph is a hardworking young carpenter with his eye on the girl. The wise men -- portrayed here as Babylonian house astrologers -- include the traditional white and black man, though curiously, the one from the Orient is another white guy. They do provide a few of the lighthearted elements in this otherwise safe film as they bicker about whether the journey to Bethlehem should be a spiritual one or an arduous one. Otherwise, all the traditional elements are here -- the announcement by an angel, a visit to a older pregnant cousin, a difficult, wind-blown trek to be counted in a census, camels on sand dunes, etc.

    What's missing is any of the humanity of other versions. Actors read their lines without much conviction and with no sense that events could transpire in any way but the scripted one. When 3 stars (actually, 2 planets and a mysterious heavenly body) combine into a blinding spotlight (accompanied by a Star Wars light saber sound effects) no one reacts, as though such celestial light shows were run of the mill in the first century.

    Every movie version of the Jesus story bring its own special touch. In "The Nativity Story," village life is depicted with loving attention to detail. Entire families sleep together in the same room, roofs are painstakingly wrought of wattle and daub and women spend lots of time toting jugs of water. And I think this is one of the few movies to depict Mary as having a living mother *and* father. The people of Nazareth act in true peasant fashion, holding grudges and having dirty faces and hands. Too bad the movie's writers didn't imbue the plot and dialog with the same sense of gritty realism. And history buffs might grind their teeth at some of the confusions, the most egregious being the equation of Roman and Herodian soldiers.

    As it stands, "The Nativity Story" is decent Sunday school fare, with nothing controversial and nothing illuminating.



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