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Read the full story here in the TIME Vault: The Jesus Revolution The cover art, which is by Stanislaw Zagorski and now in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery, is among TIME’s grooviest.
We called it ‘The Jesus Movement.’ But I think actually TIME editors had it right, because they saw something bigger.” Jesus Revolution is currently streaming on Netflix.
"Jesus Revolution" is a dull, sanitized version of the 1960s and '70s evangelical Christian movement in Southern California, starring Kelsey Grammer and directed by Jon Erwin and Brent McCorkle.
The Jesus Revolution cast made be led by Kelsey Grammer, but it also contains many young up-and-coming actors, and even Jesus in The Chosen.
Eight years ago, as writer-director Jon Erwin was researching an unrelated movie project, he stumbled across a 1971 issue of Time magazine, which featured a psychedelic purple picture of Jesus ...
With “Jesus Revolution” and pro-life drama “October Baby,” brothers Andrew and Jon Erwin have become two of America’s most successful directors—especially for the Christian right.
Brent McCorkle was researching another project when he came across a Time magazine from June 1971 with a “psychedelic Jesus” on the cover. The arresting image and accompanying feature story on ...
Distributed by Lionsgate (a mainstream distributor that occasionally dabbles in faith-based films), The Jesus Revolution takes its title from a 1971 Time Magazine cover story.
The film gracefully ties together two plots through a series of converging moments, all of which center around the rapidly growing Calvary Chapel.
In Jesus Revolution, Leary, a proponent of hallucinogenic drugs, tells the crowd gathered on the beach, “The psychedelic experience is a confrontation with the Divine. It’s a spiritual awakening!
To bring about this Easter revolution, Christians can’t begin with political parties and ideologies and coat them with Jesus messaging.