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Author Mark T. Sullivan. Mark T. Sullivan (born 1958) [1] is an American author who writes mystery, suspense and historical fiction novels. His fourteen published works that are written solely by him include The Fall Line, The Purification Ceremony, Triple Cross, Rogue and the USA Today [2] and Washington Post [3] bestselling novel, Beneath a Scarlet Sky.
Priest is a 2011 American action horror film directed by Scott Stewart and stars Paul Bettany as the title character. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It is loosely based on the Korean comic of the same name by Hyung Min-woo , in turn inspired by the computer game Blood by Monolith Productions .
This is a list of movies (including television movies) based on the Bible (Old Testament and New Testament), depicting characters or figures from the Bible, or broadly derived from the revelations or interpretations therein.
Based on J. P. Gallagher's book The Scarlet Pimpernel of the Vatican (published in 1967), the film tells the story of Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty, a real-life Irish Catholic priest who saved thousands of Jews and escaped Allied POWs in Rome. [1]
A fictionalized Hans Leyers is described in the novel Beneath a Scarlet Sky, by Mark Sullivan, as the general for whom the biographical fiction and historical fiction novel's protagonist Pino Lella is depicted as a driver and interpreter. However, researchers and historians refute the author's casting and reimagination of Leyers in the role of ...
The Scarlet Gospels narration mentions that different characters in-universe debate whether the Hell Priest is an immortal being who has lived for thousands of years or if different humans have adopted his nature and appearance over the centuries, meaning the origin presented in the film could also be canon within the books or could be dismissed.
The American film industry has been producing movies based on Bible stories since 1897: The Horitz Passion Play (1897) was the first Passion play to be shown in the United States. [1] One of the earliest biblical films was the 1903 production of Samson and Delilah, produced by the French company Pathé.
Logos (2015), a novel by John Neeleman and published by Homebound Publications, a small press, and winner of an Independent Publisher Book Awards gold medal for religious fiction and the Utah Book Award for fiction, [3] is a bildungsroman that follows the life and development of the anonymous author of the original gospel. Jacob, a former ...