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The Chosen: Will Season 6 finale and Season 7 premiere hit theatres? Details here
The Chosen: Will Season 6 finale and Season 7 premiere hit theatres? Details here

Economic Times

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Economic Times

The Chosen: Will Season 6 finale and Season 7 premiere hit theatres? Details here

Actor Jonathan Roumie attends a special screening of "The Chosen: Last Supper" at the Crosby Street Hotel on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025, in New York. (Photo by Andy Kropa/Invision/AP) Synopsis Amazon MGM Studios and 5&2 Studios will release the Season 6 finale of The Chosen in theaters on March 12, 2027. Season 7 will begin with a theatrical film on March 31, 2028. These films, focusing on Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection, will later stream on Prime Video. Amazon MGM Studios and 5&2 Studios are bringing The Chosen Season 6 finale to theaters in 2027. The episode will be released as a feature film. Season 7 will follow a similar path, starting with a theatrical film in 2028. Both events will later stream on Prime Video. ADVERTISEMENT The Season 6 finale of The Chosen will be released on March 12, 2027. It will be shown only in theaters. The episode will portray the crucifixion of Jesus. This finale is being made as a standalone film. The release will give audiences a full cinematic experience. Also Read: The Sandman Season 2 Release: When will Part 1 arrive on Netflix? Here's what to expect, characters and cast Season 7 of the series will start with a film in theaters. It will depict the resurrection of Jesus. The film will premiere on March 31, 2028. Like the Season 6 finale, this feature will be created as a separate film for Chosen is a seven-season series. It tells the story of Jesus' life and teachings. The events take place in first-century Israel under Roman rule. Dallas Jenkins from 5&2 Studios writes, directs, and produces the series. The show focuses on the events around Jesus and the people near him. Also Read: GTA 6: Is upcoming game worth waiting for? Here's release date, map, global release time, gameplay and platforms ADVERTISEMENT The theatrical releases for Seasons 3 to 5 earned more than $140 million. These releases were shown in 55 countries. In the US, the films were earlier handled by Fathom Events. The strong earnings have encouraged further theatrical plans for the 6 will be on Prime Video before its finale arrives in theaters. Season 7 will stream after its premiere. Season 5 will begin streaming on Prime Video on June 15, 2025. Lionsgate manages global distribution and helped arrange the theater deals. ADVERTISEMENT When will the Season 6 finale of The Chosen release in theaters? The Season 6 finale will be released in theaters on March 12, 2027, as a feature-length film. ADVERTISEMENT When will Season 7 of The Chosen begin in theaters? Season 7 will start with a theatrical film showing the resurrection on March 31, 2028. (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel) (Catch all the US News, UK News, Canada News, International Breaking News Events, and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.) Download The Economic Times News App to get Daily International News Updates. NEXT STORY

The Chosen: Will Season 6 finale and Season 7 premiere hit theatres? Details here
The Chosen: Will Season 6 finale and Season 7 premiere hit theatres? Details here

Time of India

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

The Chosen: Will Season 6 finale and Season 7 premiere hit theatres? Details here

Amazon MGM Studios and 5&2 Studios will release the Season 6 finale of The Chosen in theaters on March 12, 2027. Season 7 will begin with a theatrical film on March 31, 2028. These films, focusing on Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection, will later stream on Prime Video. Actor Jonathan Roumie attends a special screening of "The Chosen: Last Supper" at the Crosby Street Hotel on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025, in New York. (Photo by Andy Kropa/Invision/AP) Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads The Chosen Season 6 Finale Theatrical Release Date Season 7 Theatrical Premiere Date Storyline Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Box Office Success Where to Stream Season 5, 6 and 7 FAQs Amazon MGM Studios and 5&2 Studios are bringing The Chosen Season 6 finale to theaters in 2027. The episode will be released as a feature film. Season 7 will follow a similar path, starting with a theatrical film in 2028. Both events will later stream on Prime Video The Season 6 finale of The Chosen will be released on March 12, 2027. It will be shown only in theaters. The episode will portray the crucifixion of Jesus. This finale is being made as a standalone film. The release will give audiences a full cinematic 7 of the series will start with a film in theaters. It will depict the resurrection of Jesus. The film will premiere on March 31, 2028. Like the Season 6 finale, this feature will be created as a separate film for Chosen is a seven-season series. It tells the story of Jesus' life and teachings. The events take place in first-century Israel under Roman rule. Dallas Jenkins from 5&2 Studios writes, directs, and produces the series. The show focuses on the events around Jesus and the people near theatrical releases for Seasons 3 to 5 earned more than $140 million. These releases were shown in 55 countries. In the US, the films were earlier handled by Fathom Events. The strong earnings have encouraged further theatrical plans for the 6 will be on Prime Video before its finale arrives in theaters. Season 7 will stream after its premiere. Season 5 will begin streaming on Prime Video on June 15, 2025. Lionsgate manages global distribution and helped arrange the theater Season 6 finale will be released in theaters on March 12, 2027, as a feature-length 7 will start with a theatrical film showing the resurrection on March 31, 2028.

Inside a Sadistic Sisterhood at the End of the World
Inside a Sadistic Sisterhood at the End of the World

New York Times

time04-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

Inside a Sadistic Sisterhood at the End of the World

Writers have long been preoccupied with the end of the world, though perhaps it would be more accurate to say that the true preoccupation is with whatever new, tenuous social order struggles up from the rubble. What would starting over look like? And are human beings doomed to create dystopian conditions wherever they go? In the Argentine writer Agustina Bazterrica's brilliant, chilling new novel, 'The Unworthy,' the young, unnamed narrator enters a religious order called the House of the Sacred Sisterhood after spending an unspecified amount of time wandering a landscape ravaged by climate catastrophe. Is this place, overseen by the Superior Sister and an unseen, all-powerful He, a refuge or a nightmare? And what exactly happens when a member of the unworthy class is elevated to the rank of the Chosen? These are among the questions that propel this slim, suspenseful novel. Amid global hunger and drought the Sacred Sisterhood has managed to cultivate a steady food supply — even if it involves eating a lot of crickets — and drinkable water. But danger abounds. The hierarchy is at once enigmatic and brutally enforced. Sacrifices are demanded. The punishments for infractions, administered by the sadistic Superior Sister, include whipping, disfigurement and being buried or burned alive. The mind-bending violence crushes any possibility of fellowship between the women who have found their way to this place (in the opening chapter, the narrator recounts dropping cockroaches into the pillowcase of another sister and then sewing up the slip). The unworthy are quick to turn on one another, claws out and teeth bared, in the name of survival. The horror is made visceral by Bazterrica's feverish, mythic prose, translated from the Spanish by Sarah Moses: 'There's something sick in the wind, a warm stupor of venom and insects. A curse creeping out of the devastated lands. We can feel the vibration of something destructive coming into being. … Something was throbbing in the air, silent and bestial.' Some sentences break off midstream; others contain words crossed out. We witness the narrator's struggle to wrest the unspeakable into language. The act of writing sustains her. She writes in the blue ink left behind by the monks who once tended this land; she writes with charcoal made from plants; she writes with her own blood. The writing is a mortal risk: She must hide these pages meticulously, so they're not discovered by the Superior Sister. She creates a record of both her cloistered, terrorized life with the Sacred Sisterhood and the world she knew before. The memories of her mother and of Circe, her companion after the apocalypse, are especially vivid and anguishing. Like Lauren Oya Olamina in Octavia Butler's 'Parable of the Sower,' this dystopian narrator feels compelled to make a record of the end times; for both women, to write is to preserve a drop of agency, of humanity, in a blasted world, where survival often demands a willingness to commit unfathomable violations. 'Without mercy you survive,' Bazterrica's narrator says. To write is to process the new reality that is taking shape, the new story that is unfolding, and that will no longer die with her. 'Why put myself in danger with this book of the night?' the narrator writes. 'Because if I write it, then it was real.' The scrap of humanity the narrator has preserved through the act of writing is awakened when a mysterious stranger, Lucía, appears inside the walls of the Sacred Sisterhood. She seems to be a wanderer, as the narrator once was, and is taken in. Before long, Lucía displays otherworldly powers and, perhaps even more shockingly, a sense of compassion. 'The Unworthy' is a novel filled with secrets, and part of the thrill is cracking open one forbidden door at a time. Given that it's populated almost entirely by women, it's striking that patriarchal violence is at the center of the Sacred Sisterhood's rotten core. Solidarity between the unworthy, then, becomes a way to fight back. A secret bond forms between Lucía and the narrator, one that reminds them both that communion with others will always generate more strength than remaining crouched in suspicious solitude. These glimmers of hopeful connection are, of course, radically fragile — at any moment the two could be discovered and killed — but they are nevertheless critical to the narrator's emotional opening. In the novel's final moments, she remembers what survival is really for.

Parents of 4-year-old boy who accidentally shot, killed himself will not be charged: Davenport police
Parents of 4-year-old boy who accidentally shot, killed himself will not be charged: Davenport police

Yahoo

time25-02-2025

  • Yahoo

Parents of 4-year-old boy who accidentally shot, killed himself will not be charged: Davenport police

The Brief Charges won't be filed against the parents of a 4-year-old boy who accidentally shot and killed himself in Davenport. The Davenport police chief said the parents are devastated by the tragedy. The 4-year-old found the gun inside a car in the garage while the rest of his family was busy inside. DAVENPORT, Fla. - Davenport's Chief of Police said he will not be filing charges against the parents of a boy who found his father's gun in his car and who accidentally shot and killed himself. Chosen Morris, 4, lived with his parents, Robert and Quinta Morris, and two older siblings on Citrus Landing Boulevard where the shooting occurred Friday evening. Chief Steve Parker told FOX 13 he talked with Chosen's parents on Monday morning, who said they're just absolutely devastated by this tragedy, and they asked for privacy during this time. RELATED: 4-year-old boy dies after accidentally shooting himself in Davenport Friday: DPD Before the shooting, the family had been getting ready to go out for pizza, and they promised Chosen they would stop by a store to buy him a present, then they would play board games once they returned. While the rest of the family was busy inside the house, Chosen went to the garage. "We believe that Chosen was excited about going out that evening and got into the car to wait for the rest of the family and, in doing so, found the firearm underneath the seat and, while playing with it, it discharged and caused his fatal injuries," said Parker. Chosen was taken to a hospital in Orlando where he died of his injuries the following day. Follow FOX 13 on YouTube The Chief said Chosen's father simply forgot to remove the firearm and secure it in his bedroom after he got home from work on Thursday. "I think the most important thing to start with is knowing where your firearms are at all times," said Parker. "When you get out of the car, know, 'I've got it locked in my glovebox if I need it,' or 'I know it's in my gun safe in my bedroom.'" Secondly, make sure it's locked up, such as with a trigger lock which the department gives away for free, and the chief also suggests talking to your kids about the danger of guns, no matter how young they are, and taking them out for target practice, so they can learn how to safely handle firearms. "It impacts all of us when these things happen, especially when you are a parent or a grandparent, because that can be your child, that could be your grandchild," said Parker. HB 1087 was introduced last year that would have required owners to lock their firearms in a trunk or glove box when left inside an unoccupied car. If not, owners could face a second-degree misdemeanor. That law didn't go very far, but Chief Parker believes, if passed, it would help prevent unnecessary gun deaths. STAY CONNECTED WITH FOX 13 TAMPA: Download the FOX Local app for your smart TV Download FOX Local mobile app:Apple |Android Download the FOX 13 News app for breaking news alerts, latest headlines Download the SkyTower Radar app Sign up for FOX 13's daily newsletter

'They are devastated': 4-year-old Davenport boy dies of self-inflicted gunshot
'They are devastated': 4-year-old Davenport boy dies of self-inflicted gunshot

Yahoo

time24-02-2025

  • Yahoo

'They are devastated': 4-year-old Davenport boy dies of self-inflicted gunshot

A 4-year-old Davenport boy has died of a self-inflicted gunshot after finding a firearm in his family's car Friday night. Law enforcement is calling for tighter gun safety, as it's the second such death in Polk County this year. Chosen Morris died at Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children in Orlando about 3 p.m. Saturday, according to Davenport Police Chief Steven Parker. He is survived by his parents, Robert and Quinta Morris, an 11-year-old sister and 7-year-old brother. "I can't stress to you enough how tragic this is," the chief said. "I met with the family earlier today, and they are devastated by what happened." On Friday night, Davenport police responded to AdventHealth Heart of Florida in Haines City about 6:30 p.m. for reports of a 4-year-old boy with a gunshot wound to his head. Davenport detectives said the Morris family was in their home on Citrus Landing Boulevard getting ready for a family night out, including heading out for pizza then home to play a family game. Robert Morris was in the restroom preparing for the evening out, the chief said. The boy's mother, Quinta, was on her computer in the master bedroom when she said she heard a noise she described as a "pop." Quinta Morris stepped out of her bedroom believing her children had possibly broken something. She approached her two older children, who were in the living room playing on electronics with earbuds inserted. Parker said Quinta Moriris began looking for Chosen when she noticed the interior door to the garage was open. Quinta Morris entered the garage to find Chosen in the driver's seat of the family vehicle with a single gunshot wound to the head. Davenport detectives believe Chosen was excited about the family outing and got into the car to wait for the others. In the vehicle, Chosen found a Smith & Weson M&P .40-caliber handgun owned by Robert Morris, and upon playing with it accidentally discharged it, Parker said. The couple immediately drove Chosen to AdventHealth, approximately two miles from their home. The mother, a nursing student, began taking measures immediately to help stabilize her son. "The Davenport community is trying to wrap their arms around this family due to the tragic accident," Parker said. "On the same side, there's responsibility and lessons we need to learn in gun safety." Parker said Chosen's death should serve as a "stark reminder" of best practices and gun safety for firearm owners. The firearm in the Morris family's vehicle was legally owned by Robert Morris, who Parker said told police he owned it for personal safety on his travel to and from work. Robert Morris told detectives he usually takes the firearm out of the car on Thursday nights when he arrives home from work, and securely stores it in his bedroom. "He forgot. He simply forgot," the chief said. "He forgot Thursday, this happens Friday." Parker said gun owners need to know exactly where their firearms are at all times, and make sure they are secure when not in their immediate possession. Gun Safety: Nonprofit offers tips on kids and gun safety after recent tragedy Davenport police officials will meet with the State Attorney's Office, which will review the evidence and determine whether Robert Morris or the Morris family will face any charges related to Chosen's death. "We are not seeking any criminal charges," Parker said. The chief said he does not feel the event shows any sign of parental negligence, despite the door to the garage and family car being unlocked. "I don't know that you would expect a 4-year-old to go out and get into the car in this fashion," he said. Parker encouraged firearm owners to practice more stringent gun safety, as this is the second child in Polk County to die of a self-inflicted gunshot wound from a firearm stowed in a car. Major Smith, a 6-year-old in Lakeland, died from a similar accident in January. "If you don't have it in a lock box, there are trigger guards or trigger locks you can put on there," the chief said. The trigger lock, handed out by Davenport Police Department for free to residents, locks around the gun's barrel in a way that stops it from fully closing, preventing it from rotating and firing the next round. "You should always know where your firearms are at all times," Parker said. Under Florida law, gun owners are supposed to keep their firearms inaccessible to juveniles, defined as anyone younger than 16. This legislative session, state Reps. Joe Casello, D-Boynton Beach, and Dan Daley, D-Coral Spring, have filed House Bill 1087, which would limit the storage of firearms in motor vehicles or vessels. If the House bill passes, a gun left stored in a vehicle will be required to store it in a lockbox or a secure fashion. Florida Sen. Tina Polsky, D-Boca Raton, filed Senate Bill 252, named the "Responsible Gun Ownership Act," which would require background checks and set other requirements for the sale or transfer of said he could potentially support measures that attempt to improve gun safety regulations. "Anytime you can put things in place to make guns safe, it's going to be helpful, absolutely, as long as the public adheres to it," he said. "I think the sad part about it is we have laws in place and we still have these tragedies happen." This article originally appeared on The Ledger: Davenport boy dies after finding father's gun in car

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