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Passion 2016 Uncut Version

"Passion" (2016) is a film that exists in a unique space within Brian De Palma’s filmography. It is a remake of the 2010 French film Crime d'amour (Love Crime) by Alain Corneau. For fans of De Palma, the "Uncut Version" is significant because the theatrical release (and many festival cuts) suffered from heavy editing to achieve an "R" rating in the US, which diluted the director's signature stylistic flourishes.

The "Uncut" version (often referred to as the Director's Cut or the Unrated version) restores approximately 3 to 5 minutes of footage, primarily expanding on the eroticism and the brutality of the film's climax. It is widely considered the superior way to view the film, as it aligns with De Palma’s history of pushing boundaries regarding sex and violence in cinema (e.g., Dressed to Kill, Scarface). passion 2016 uncut version

Passion 2016 challenged attendees to abandon the "American Dream" lifestyle for a Kingdom-centered one. Key lifestyle principles included: "Passion" (2016) is a film that exists in

During a transition, worship leader Christy Nockels sat down at a piano. In the edited version, this is a brief interlude. In the uncut version, she speaks for fifteen minutes about infertility, doubt, and the goodness of God—a sermon that wasn't on the schedule, prompted entirely by a note she received from a girl in the third row. The raw, shaky close-up of her tear-streaked face is one of the most powerful pieces of Christian media from that decade. The "Uncut" version (often referred to as the