![]() The Last Supper Wall Hanging Tapestry $49.00 I just received the item today, I loved, it it is really perfect in our dining area. I can say it has good quality. I guess the price is really affordable compare to those who are in canvas and the size is small. I might buy another one. ![]() The Last Supper $14.94 Director Stacy Title and screenwriter Dan Rosen--surely at both's finest hour--created with this film perhaps the ultimate cautionary tale of what dehumanization and rage labels like "liberal" and "conservatives" can create when accepted as absolute identity. Rosen was at one time a stand up comic with a taste for dark humor, and "The Last Supper" provides that in spades (if you have the stomach for it). The plot of the film is really only a skeleton for what the creators are trying to say. A group of liberal undergraduate college students invite vicious right-wing and well known Conservative pundits to for a pleasant dinner, and then perform a little "Arsenic and Lace" with a blue bottle of poison they mask as strong wine. One has to suspend one's disbelief a little to enjoy the movie: if these people are so famous, why the hell don't they tell anyone where they're having dinner or who invited them? People like Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, and Ann Coulter make sure they are heavily guarded at all times. Though all five of them are involved, the leader (played with a perfect concentrated madness by a young Courtney B. Vance) Luke is the engine behind it all. At the beginning of the film a young soldier (Zac) returning home from the Persian Gulf War ("Was that a war or a Republican TV commercial?" Luke unwisely asks) needs shelter from the rain. The five make a bad choice and let him in. Things go from unpleasant to bad to worse to homicidal as the anger builds between this maniac and the five students; he praises Hitler, deems liberals less than human beings, and puts a knife to the throat of Mark, a Jewish student. He then proceeds to break the arm of another member, lets him fall to the ground, and Mark stabs him in the back. This is an important part in the film. It wasn't *exactly* self defense. While this guy was obviously sociopathic and may have hurt the rest of them, a second viewing shows Mark approach long after his friend has hit the ground and is no longer in danger. It's hard to feel sympathy for Zac, but this is really how it starts. Luke jumps right on the bandwagon, stating coldly: "We should just finish dessert and bury the cracker." Later on, a local female sherrif shows up asking about Zac. He had, apparently, raped murdered a young girl in the community before arriving. This fuels the group's thoughts that if they kill these people before they live out a natural life, they may be saving the world from great harm. The ancient shoulda woulda coulda question is asked repeatedly, at the film's climax: "It's 1909. You find yourself in a bar with a young artist named Adolf Hitler. Do you kill him to save billions of people?" Title and Rosen toy with the viewer, swaying from the wussy excesses of ultra liberals to the outright evil of the far right. Both become annoying. Still, though, when we encounter "Norman" (Ron Perlman), the group's main target, we see what they are driving at. A hilarious masterpiece, more relevant today than ever. ![]() The Last Supper Wall Plaque $27.95 This excellent rendition of "The Last Supper" is cast in finely detailed alabastrite and is enhanced by its own ornate, built-in frame. 16 1/2" X 3/4" X 10" high. EXCLUSIVE. This means it was especially designed for the Divine Inspirational Line. ![]() Jesus Christ The Last Supper Religious Picture Oak Framed Art Print $119.00 This beautiful framed art goes well in any room. Artwork and frame are manufactured in the United States by Art Prints Inc. using quality materials such as premium grade A solid hardwood, tempered picture frame glass, and high quality acid free lithograph art paper. |
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