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The Movie That Just Keeps Changing Lives
Now Bella Is Being Shown in Prison
BY Steve Weatherbe REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
November 1-7, 2009 Issue |
Posted 10/25/09 at 11:12 PM
LOS
ANGELES â Like many of Jason Jonesâ best ideas, this one came in the middle of
the night.
A
member of the production team that put out the pro-life hit movie of 2006, Bella,
Jonesâ previous nocturnal brainstorm had instigated Bella Hero,
a campaign devoted to putting a copy of the film in the hands of every visitor
to a crisis-pregnancy center in the United States.
Next
came Bella on Campus, which raises funds to pay for college
screenings.
Now,
because of a chance meeting with a New York City beggar, drug addict and ex-con
to whom he had given a ticket to the movie the day before, he had a new idea
and a new target market.
He
instantly called up Tracy Reynolds, one of his key partners in Bella Hero,
and pitched it: âWhy donât we screen Bella in prisons?â
On
Sept. 30, 56 inmates of Gatesville Womenâs Prison in Gatesville, Texas, kicked
the new program off with a viewing that had many in tears. Recounts Reynolds:
âOne woman, who was in a wheelchair, said, âIâve been here 27 years, and this
is the best day of my life.ââ
Jonesâ
idea relates to the fact that Bella is more than just the story of Nina, a young
woman struggling to make ends meet in New York City and contemplating an
abortion; it also tells how Jose, a once promising soccer player devastated by
having killed a young girl through careless driving, and being jailed for it,
turns his life around by persuading Nina to bear her child. He not only saves the child, he adopts her â
and changes his own and Ninaâs life in the process.
Consequently,
the new campaign is called Joseâs Second Chance.
Bella grossed $1.3 million during its opening weekend,
with only 165 screens, earning the second-highest per-screen average of any
film in theaters that weekend. The film changed lives: first, among those who
made it, then among many who saw it â and it continues to do so.
Actress
Tammy Blanchard, who played the lead role of Nina in the film, became pregnant
after making the movie.
âI
never wanted to have children,â Blanchard said. âI felt it was pointless.â
Yet,
her attitude changed after making Bella, especially due to the influence of the young
actress, Sophie Nyweide, who played the role of Bella.
âI
realized that having a child is about producing more love in the world,â
Blanchard said. âThatâs what life is about â love and hope.â
Bella gained its entrée into Gatesville through
Discipleship Unlimited, an interdenominational prison ministry founded in 1973
to respond to the proliferation of prisons and prisoners in one small district
of Texas.
Founder
Linda Strom wants to get the film in all the prisons, but for the first
showing, she picked the inmates of a special faith-based 22-month program that
sequesters participants in their own dormitory every evening for education,
training and spiritual instruction.
Bella is so powerful for this group, she said, âbecause
these women have never experienced the forgiveness of God. But they have so
much experience with pain they can easily experience the pain of the characters
in Bella. And Bella says to them: âYou can have pain and you can
leave it behind and have new beginnings.ââ
Jonesâ Vow
Itâs
no coincidence that Jones is one of those people who can readily identify with
the pain of Bella.
When
he was 16 in Chicago, a girl he was dating was forced into having an abortion
against her will. Jones vowed to her that he would devote his life to ending
abortion in America. He later became a Catholic, partially through meeting many
Catholics in the pro-life movement.
He
came on board at Metanoia Films in 2007, and, knowing nothing about filmmaking,
concentrated on drumming up investors. He did a good job, and so did Bella: It
has now grossed $39 million. Metanoiaâs partners, including Eduardo VerĂĄstegui,
have shepherded five more films to the preproduction stage.
They
are seeking $105 million in private investment to finance them.
VerĂĄstegui,
a Mexican matinee idol who turned his back on trashy and sexualized roles after
rediscovering the Catholic faith of his childhood, spoke to and prayed with the
inmates at Gatesville Womenâs Prison after the screening.
VerĂĄstegui and Jones are eager to
speak personally at any prison screening they are able to attend. At
Gatesville, VerĂĄstegui got down on his knees, Reynolds reports, to pray and to
tell the inmates, âI want to apologize on behalf of all the men who hurt you.â
Later,
he spoke with each woman one-on-one, and the jail extended its visiting hours
to accommodate the time needed to do so.
Jones
says more than 100 women have credited the movie for their decision to bear
their unborn children, and another 75 credit the Bella Hero
program. He is keeping his word to his former girlfriend. Lately, he has heard
from her: She is ready to go public in the pro-life ministry.
Tim Drake contributed
to this story.
Steve Weatherbe writes from
Victoria, British
Columbia.
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