‘Little Hope’ Comes Home With Plans to Premiere in Tyler TX | |
“This documentary is well worth watching.
”Ted Baehr, Movieguide
"...begs the question, 'Are we truly the hands and feet of Christ?' And if so, 'How well are we doing?'"
Melinda Ledman, Christian Cinema
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TYLER, Texas – Oct. 23, 2014 – LITTLE HOPE WAS ARSON—which drew standing-room-only crowds at film festivals—unveiled its trailer and key art today. Distribution company, The Orchard, and production companies theCollaborate and Goodnight Smoke, will debut the film—part detective story, part faith film—November 21 in New York, and November 23, in the heart of East Texas where the story unfolded. The film’s release will spread to Los Angeles, and a number of other cities including several in Texas, on November 28. LITTLE HOPE WAS ARSON tells the 2010 story of ten East Texas churches set ablaze in one month, sparking the largest manhunt in regional history. But once the crime was solved, the real mystery began. What drove two young men to do it? What effect did it have on their families and the churches? And when a church loses its building . . . can it still stand? “From the moment I read about these fires, I knew there was a redemptive story that could rise from these violent and tragic acts,” said Theo Love, the film’s director. “When churches and families face such loss—of property and relationships—it can turn attention to what really matters.” Produced by Trenton Waterson of theCollaborate and Love of Goodnight Smoke, LITTLE HOPE WAS ARSON is executive produced by Bryan Storkel. PBS’ Independent Lens, with U.S. broadcast rights, will air the feature-length documentary during its 2014-15 season. Film and music distributor, The Orchard, acquired U.S. and Canadian rights other than broadcast and will release the film in theaters in multiple markets and through digital outlets. Love—the child of foreign missionaries—was particularly attracted to the story as he was raised worshipping overseas most often without the benefit of a church building. Returned to the states, he worked in building maintenance for a California mega-church. “It was a huge sanctuary, and I often worked in it alone at night,” Love recalls. “It really made me consider the values of Western Christianity. Was that the church? Or is it the people? It was these experiences and questions that helped me to dig deeper into this heartbreaking story.” LITTLE HOPE WAS ARSON weaves thought-provoking questions throughout a gripping true-crime drama, in which communities are challenged, families brought to crisis and, ultimately, redemption sought. CURRENTLY SCHEDULED OPENINGS Nov. 21, 2014New York Cinema Village Nov. 23, 2014 Tyler, Texas Liberty Hall Nov. 25, 2014Oakland Calif. New Parkway Cinema Nov. 28, 2014Los Angeles Laemmle Noho 7 San Diego Media Arts Center San Francisco Roxie Theater Portland, Ore. Clinton Street Theater Dallas Texas Theatre Houston Drafthouse Vintage Park Austin Drafthouse Slaughter Lane Lubbock Drafthouse Lubbock New Braunfels, Texas Drafthouse New Braunfels Burlington, Iowa Capitol Theater Dec. 5, 2014Columbus Gateway Film Center New Orleans Zeitgeist Arts Center Edom, Texas Old Firehouse Juneau, Alaska Gold Town Nickelodeon Tallahassee, Fla. All Saints Cinema Learn More at LittleHopeWasArson.com Visit Little Hope on Facebook at facebook.com/ And on Twitter at twitter.com/LittleHopeFilm For interviews, contact: Michael Conrad Michael@Lovell-Fairchild.com 214-616-0320 |
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