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  2. Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Scorsese_Presents:...

    Martin Scorsese in 2024.. After Raging Bull in the early 1980s, Martin Scorsese considered quitting filmmaking, wanting to travel to Rome to shoot a series of television documentaries on the lives of different saints: "I literally thought it would be my last film," said Scorsese in 2016, referring to Raging Bull.

  3. Martin Scorsese Partners With Fox Nation for New Docudrama ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/martin-scorsese...

    The docudrama will premiere in two parts, with the first four episodes set … Martin Scorsese Partners With Fox Nation for New Docudrama ‘Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints’ Skip to main ...

  4. Docudrama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Docudrama

    A docudrama, in which historical fidelity is the keynote, is generally distinguished from a film merely "based on true events", a term which implies a greater degree of dramatic license, and from the concepts of historical drama, a broader category which may also incorporate entirely fictionalized events intermixed with factual ones, and ...

  5. List of saints from Asia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_saints_from_Asia

    The following is the list of saints, including the year in which they were canonized and the country or countries with which they are associated. The Four Martyrs of Thane (d. 1321) Francis Xavier, Jesuit priest (1622, China, India, and Japan) The 26 Sainted Martyrs of Japan (1862, Japan and India) John de Brito, Jesuit priest (1947, India)

  6. Masakazu Nakai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masakazu_Nakai

    Nakai Masakazu zenshū (in Japanese). Bijutsu Shuppansha. Nakai, Masakazu (December 2010). "Film Theory and the Crisis of Contemporary Aesthetics". Review of Japanese Culture and Society. 22: 80–87. Nakai Masakazu (2016). “La logique des comités.” Translated by Michael Lucken. European Journal of Japanese Philosophy 1: 289–357. Kaffen ...

  7. Akihiro Kitada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akihiro_Kitada

    Akihiro Kitada (北田 暁大, Kitada Akihiro, born December 28, 1971) is a Japanese sociologist and an associate professor at the Interfaculty Initiative in Information Studies, University of Tokyo. He received his PhD from the University of Tokyo in 2004.

  8. Vatican Miracle Examiner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vatican_Miracle_Examiner

    The story follows two men, Hiraga Josef Kō and Roberto Nicholas, who work for the mysterious organization The Seat of the Saints (聖徒の座, Seito no Za), an element of the Vatican dedicated to investigating alleged miracles; during their work, they usually find themselves involved in mysterious murder cases, which they often end up investigating.

  9. Kirishitan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirishitan

    The Japanese term Kirishitan (吉利支丹, 切支丹, キリシタン, きりしたん), from Portuguese cristão (cf. Kristang), meaning "Christian", referred to Catholic Christians in Japanese and is used in Japanese texts as a historiographic term for Catholics in Japan in the 16th and 17th centuries.