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Broadway by the bay 2012
Broadway by the bay 2012














On the wedding night, Laban pulls a fast one and switches Rachel with her older sister, Leah (probably in a burka). Rachel’s father, Laban, tells Jacob he can marry Rachel if he works for him for seven years for less than minimum wage. He falls in love with a lady named Rachel, the younger of two daughters.

broadway by the bay 2012 broadway by the bay 2012 broadway by the bay 2012

Jacob, however, stole his brother’s birthright from him by covering himself with sheepskin and convincing Dad that he was Esau, who must have been a pretty hairy guy.įlash forward to Jacob being a young man on the move with a mind to marry. Jacob, Joseph’s dad, was a twin, but because Jacob’s brother, Esau, left the womb five minutes earlier, Esau was the rightful heir to their father. The show is something truly wondrous: a child’s eye view of the bible’s first tale of forgiveness. It was written in a far off land called "The Sixties," when the Beatles were taking magical mystery tours and the lost tribes of America were flocking to another mystical country called San Francisco for the summer of love.

#BROADWAY BY THE BAY 2012 MOVIE#

But when you look at the lack of response hurricane Katrina got in the first 24 hours…maybe one of those holes isn't so big after all, though the conspiracy-style cover-up in the movie was a bit much.Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat is the work of two very young men for a boy’s school. I felt like some of those holes were there in a couple of gratuitous shock value scenes that fell a little flat, and in the response from the government. I kind of wanted to see holes in it to find some respite from the growing anxiety. Of course the difference was this was a bit more bloody and once you come to understand the nature of the biological danger it goes to a whole new level of revulsion. It was like watching one of these catastrophes like hurricane Katrina or hurricane Sandy where you just feel so bad for the people involved. I felt an emotional outpouring of sympathy for the victims. While watching it, my mind was going into overdrive trying to find reasons that 'this isn't real this really couldn't happen like this.' There were a couple of scenes that were chilling in how similar they were to actual news stories. I never thought I'd say this, but I was glad when I found little discrepancies in the portrayal of the collapse of the infrastructure, hospital and police procedures, etc. This is weird horror in the realm of the real. This is not simply a mutated flesh eating infection, a curse, or anything quite so simple but neither does it have the histrionic level drama that some horror junkies need these days. It all made sense once you understood what was happening but it definitely comes out of a blind spot in the horror realm. The chain of events that cascaded into this disaster was surprisingly complex and at the same time very on point with the risks industrialization poses to the environment and to us! I don't think I've seen a threat in a horror movie this well thought out in many years. The thing about this is that once we come to understand the origin of this outbreak it sounds like something that really could happen. It has some of that Blair Witch camera work which I normally despise, but for this documentary style flick it worked really well and I think this is the best example of its genre I've seen. A small town novice reporter was on scene covering the 4th of July and she describes what happened with the help of her own camera footage as well as other digital evidence pieced together from a variety of sources.

broadway by the bay 2012

Within 24 hours the town is in chaos, surrounded by the national guard, and quarantined. The hospital can't figure out what it is. The symptoms are strange, disgusting, and quickly don't add up. A small town on the coast of Maryland has a bizarre outbreak of some kind in the middle of their 4th of July festivities.














Broadway by the bay 2012