From ‘Parasite’ to ‘Titanic’: 10 Iconic Art-Filled Films to Watch Over the Holidays

Think art is just a prop in movies? Think again. Major masterpieces often making unexpected appearances on the big screen and can even be integral to the plot. From the haunting childlike drawings in Parasite to Seurat’s serene masterpiece in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, these carefully chosen works of art add layers of meaning, symbolism, and visual flair to our favorite films.
With the holidays approaching—and plenty of time to stream and relax—we’ve rounded up 10 films filled with art for you to enjoy. Happy holidays and happy viewing!

Parasite
Song Kang-ho, who plays the destitute Mr. Kim, holding the suseok in Parasite. Photo ©2019 CJ ENM CORPORATION, BARUNSON.
In a particularly humorous scene from this hit Oscar-winning film, a young woman named Ki-jung (Park So-dam) poses as an art therapist to land a lucrative job in the household of a wealthy Korean family. The childlike drawings were made by up-and-coming Korean artist Zibezi. After a friend recommended his artwork to Parasite director Bong Joon-ho, it sent his art career soaring.

Goodfellas
Ray Liotta, Robert De Niro, Paul Sorvino, and Joe Pesci pose for a publicity portrait for Goodfellas (1990). Photo: Warner Brothers/Getty Images.
In the beloved gangster movie about real-life mobster-turned-informant Henry Hill (Ray Liotta), one of the most famous scenes takes place in a kitchen where director Martin Scorsese’s real life mother, Catherine, plays the role of mother of wise-cracking Tommy De Vito (Joe Pesci), and she’s showing off one of her paintings.
Many assumed the painting is fictitious, but in fact, it was based on a photograph by Adam Woolfitt from the November 1978 issue of National Geographic, where it was included in a feature on the River Shannon in Ireland. The hilarious ensuing mobster art critique of the painting is one of the film’s funniest moments.

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
A still from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986) set in the Art Institute of Chicago. Courtesy of Paramount Pictures.
Amid a full-day of school hooky hijinks in the Windy City, the film’s three main characters, Ferris Bueller (Matthew Broderick), Sloane Petersen (Mia Sara) and Cameron Frye (Alan Ruck), make a stop at the city’s beloved, masterpiece-filled Art Institute of Chicago. As The Smiths’ famous song “Please Let Me Get What I Want,” soars in the background, the group takes in the masterpieces, including a beautiful close-up of Georges Seurat’s iconic Pointillist masterpiece A Sunday on La Grande Jatte (1884).

Titanic
Kate Winslet in Titanic (1997), holding a replica of Picasso’s Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907). Photo: Screen grab.
In a famous but deleted scene towards the beginning of James Cameron’s hit film, Rose’s (Kate Winslet) maids carry her collection of modern art into the luxury suite. “Who’s the artist?” one of the maids asks. “Something Picasso,” Rose answers. The painting in question is Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907), painted five years before the Titanic set sail from Southampton. Also on board are reproductions of L’Étoile (The Star) (1878) by Edgar Degas and a canvas from Claude Monet’s series of “Water Lilies.” Rose’s fiancé Cal (Billy Zane) disdainfully dismisses the paintings as  a “waste of money” and opines forcefully that this Picasso guy “will not amount to a thing.”

Velvet Buzzsaw
Zawe Ashton and Jake Gyllenhaal in Velvet Buzzsaw (2019). Photo courtesy Netflix.
In this surreal art world satire, where people become victims of violence at the hands of the artworks themselves, critic Morf Vandewalt (Jake Gyllenhaal) asks a cataloguer named Gita (Nitya Vidyasagar): “That’s a Freud?” a reference to famous portrait painter Lucian Freud, whose works have sold for as much as $86 million at auction. Vanderwalt is looking at a large canvas in the corner of the room, a picture of a nude man, staring directly at the viewer. Gita responds drolly: “It’s been in a crate since ’92, and it’s going back in one.”

Eyes Wide Shut
Nicole Kidman in Eyes Wide Shut (1999). A painting by Christiane Kubrick hangs in the background. Photo: Screen grab.
Stanley Kubrick’s much-hyped 1999 film featuring Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman as married couple Bill and Alice featured a healthy sampling of works by Christiane Susanne Harlan, a German-born painter who met Kubrick on the set of 1957 antiwar film Paths of Glory. They eventually married.
She started painting after studying art in California, building a successful career with exhibitions in Rome, London, and New York. Christiane’s most prominently featured work in Eyes Wide Shut is titled Seedbox Theatre, a long landscape depicting a garden with graphically rendered flowers, which hangs in the couple’s dining room.

Bram Stoker’s Dracula
Gary Oldman and Keanu Reeves in Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992). Photo: American Zoetrope © 1992.
Francis Ford Coppola’s 1992 cinematic take on this well-trodden subject matter features Keanu Reeves as young British solicitor Jonathan Harker. In one of the movie’s foreshadowing scenes, Harker is seated at a dining room table inside a Transylvanian castle, speaking with the lord of the castle, Count Dracula (Gary Oldman), who is his new client.
While dining, Harker points out a nearby portrait depicting a saintly, longhaired, bearded man, and notes a family resemblance to his host. Unbeknownst to Harker, the model in the painting is in fact a young Vlad Dracula, in his pre-vampire state. The artwork is immediately recognizable as a replica of German Renaissance artist Albrecht Dürer’s Self-Portrait at Twenty-Eight. The original painting, completed in the year 1500 just before the artist’s 29th birthday, is regarded as Dürer’s most significant artwork.

Nocturnal Animals
Amy Adams in Nocturnal Animals (2016). Photo: Atlaspix / Alamy Stock Photo.
In Tom Ford’s award-winning 2016 psychological thriller Nocturnal Animals, gallery owner Susan Morrow (Amy Adams) receives the manuscript of a novel written by her estranged ex-husband Tony (Jake Gyllenhaal). The book follows a man seeking revenge.
Not surprisingly, Susan constantly finds herself surrounded by art. Some works, like Jeff Koons’s Balloon Dog or Alexander Calder’s Snow Flurry, were specifically written into the screenplay by screenwriter Austin Wright to reflect the character’s emotions. Perhaps most telling is a a black-and-white painting with Christopher Wool-esque stacked letters spelling “REVENGE,” in front of which Susan pauses.

Solaris
Donatas Banionis in Solaris (1972). Photo: Mubi.
The sci-film directed by Andrei Tarkovsky revolves around a space station orbiting the fictional planet Solaris, where a scientific mission has stalled because the barebones crew of three scientists has fallen into emotional crises. Psychologist Kris Kelvin (Banionis) travels to the station to evaluate the situation, only to encounter the same mysterious crisis.
Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s The Hunters in Snow (1565) depicts a group of figures returning from a hunt, with a wintry village vista unfolding in front of them. While the character Hari sits alone in the space station’s library, gazing at the painting with cigarette in hand, the camera pans slowly over it.
The everyday landscape joins others in Bruegel’s painting cycle, “The Months,” works of which depict harvesters (The Hay Harvest) and cattle herders (The Return of the Herd), and which were also recreated for Solaris‘s library.
But it is Hunters that Tarkovsky draws viewer attention to. The snow-white setting further recalls an earlier scene in the film when Kris plays an old home video for Hari, in which a young Kris is seen running in the snow with his father, while his mother stands at a distance smoking and clutching a small dog. “I don’t know myself at all,” Hari responds. “I don’t remember.”

Synecdoche, New York
Catherine Keener in Synecdoche, New York (2008). Photo: Cinematic / Alamy Stock Photo.
Screenwriter Charlie Kaufman, famous for penning Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, made his directorial debut in 2008 with Synecdoche, New York which follows a marital conflict between two artists living in the quiet upstate town of Schenectady. Neurotic theater director Caden Cotard (Philip Seymour Hoffman) sees his life crumble when his wife Adele (Catherine Keener), who paints miniature paintings, takes off for Germany with their daughter Olive.
Each tiny detail and narrative in the film relates to the film’s overarching themes, and naturally to Adele’s artwork. The works, which are created by artist Alex Kanevsky, often depict Adele’s lovers in a blurry, Impressionist style. This reference and echoes a key part of the plot: that nothing is what it seems, and that we can never truly know another person beyond our superficial assumptions of them.

12 Books and Bibles for Christmas Reading and Gifting

Add a few of the latest editions of Bibles, some classic books, and a couple of Word In Black favorites to your holiday shopping list.

Everyone has at least one friend who’d rather be curled up with a book during the holidays than socialize with family members and friends. In fact they are often found either with an earpiece secretly listening to their audible library addition or their third Kindle reader and thanking God for yet another one. Those are usually the easiest to purchase gifts for, if we just know their areas of interest.
RELATED: Where Do Folks Leaving Traditional Church Go?
These suggestions for your shopping list represent a few of the latest editions of Bibles, some classic books, and a couple of personal favorites. 

Bibles
CSB Grace BibleBy 2K/Denmark and Cambridge University

This Bible is changing the game for young readers with dyslexia and other reading challenges. Cutting-edge, research-backed design principles — like unique letter shapes and extra space between letters, words, and lines — make Bible reading more accessible and engaging than ever

The Breathe Life BibleBy Thomas Nelson
This Bible “invites you to experience scripture through the lens of the BREATHE acronym: believe, reconcile, exalt, act, trust, hope and elevate,” according to its website. The intent is that the life of the Bible is so internalized that readers become better “agents of reconciliation.”
First Nations Version: An Indigenous Translation of the New TestamentFrom InterVarsity Press
The First Nations Version reimagines the New Testament through the lens of Native storytelling, blending simplicity, clarity, and beauty in English while staying true to the Bible’s original language. This groundbreaking translation, shaped by over five years of collaboration, brings together Indigenous voices from 25+ tribes, organizations like OneBook and Wycliffe Associates, and a diverse council of Native elders, pastors, and young adults from across North America.

The New Revised Standard Version Updated EditionPublished by the National Council of the Churches of Christ
“The NRSVue extends the New Revised Standard Version’s (NRSV) purpose to deliver an accurate, readable, up-to-date, and inclusive version of the Bible,” according to the website. “It also continues the work of offering a version as free as possible from the gender bias inherent in the English language, which can obscure earlier oral and written renditions.”
The New Testament in Color: A Multiethnic Bible Commentary
This commentary comes from a multiethnic team of scholars, bringing together diverse perspectives to create something that’s not just reflective in their backgrounds, but also deeply contextual, informative, and — hopefully — prophetic and inspiring.
Books
A Theology of Liberation: History, Politics and Salvation
Read Gustavo Gutierrez’s classic liberation theology to discover the reason for the grief his readers express at the news of his recent death.
Black Liturgies: Prayers, Poems, and Meditations for Staying HumanBy Cole Arthur Riley
Unable to find a suitable liturgy for her own worship, Riley has written something for herself and young people of faith like her.
The Day God Saw Me As BlackBy D. Danyelle Thomas
This book was written as a manifesto on the church whose walls are not wide enough to include those who’ve been systematically excluded from the mainstream of hope and faith.
Forgotten God: Reversing Our Tragic Neglect of the Holy SpiritBy Francis Chan
The author, pastor, and church planter reminds the reader of the Holy Spirit, the member of the Trinity that is often neglected, to the detriment of the believer. 
The Shack: Where Tragedy Confronts EternityBy William Paul Young
A personal favorite and teaching tool of mine. I recently heard a testimony that it was from The Shack she learned how much God really loves her. No strings attached. No ifs, and, or, buts. The book received a ton of criticism when it was published, and again when the motion picture was made. But read it for yourself and let me know your thoughts.
They Like to Never Quit Praisin’ GodBy Frank A. Thomas
It’s not a new book, but it holds its place as a classic for anyone who feels the call to preach. It highlights the strength and joy of celebration in preaching in Black preaching.
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Hollywood | Dec 22, 2024 | 5 min read Tom’s in waiting mode for Nolan’s next film

Entertainment Hollywood

Don’t know anything about it, says the actor

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Tom’s in waiting mode for Nolan’s next film

Ahmedabad Mirror
Dec 22, 2024 02:34 PM | UPDATED: Dec 22, 2024 02:39 PM | 5 min read

Seven good Christmas films you’ve probably never watched before

The Christmas Candle is based on Max Lucado’s novel of the same name.
Everyone loves to snuggle around a fire with a mug of hot chocolate and watch a good Christmas movie. But many of us have seen the best-known films, like Elf, It’s a Wonderful Life, or Home Alone, so many times that we can complete some of the lines.
If you fancy a change, here are seven seasonal movies that are less well-known, yet full of Christmas spirit:
The Family Man (2000)
This might just be the best Christmas film you’ve never seen. The protagonist is a Wall Street banker who abandoned his young sweetheart to pursue wealth, indulging in brief liaisons with attractive women along the way, and developing an extraordinarily self-centred ego. A flash of compassion leads to an encounter with a strange man and a supernatural change in his life—a glimpse of what his life could have been.
Nicolas Cage’s transformation from cold, ruthless businessman to, well, a family man, will warm any heart on a cold winter evening. However, it’s Téa Leoni’s warm, sparkling performance that truly steals the screen. The film’s old-fashioned, small-town values of prioritising family and community over wealth and success make it a perfect Christmas message.
Available on most streaming services, including free on Plex.
A Christmas Candle (2013)
There are very few family films that can claim to be thoroughly British, full of Christian faith, and enjoyable to watch. This charming period film, an adaptation of Christian pastor Max Lucado’s novel of the same name, achieves all three.
The film features Susan Boyle and her sweet voice, along with acclaimed British actors Lesley Manville, John Hannah, and Sylvester McCoy.
Freely available on YouTube and other streaming services.
The Nativity Story (2006)
This is the best adaptation of the biblical story of Jesus’s birth on film. Keisha Castle-Hughes succeeds in portraying Mary’s warmth and innocence, with other notable performances throughout.
The script extends beyond scripture, as it must, given the limited dialogue in the Gospels. What is created is believable and faithful to the original story.
Available for rent or purchase on most streaming platforms.
A Christmas Carol (1999)
No doubt you know Charles Dickens’s story, but perhaps you haven’t seen this adaptation, which stars Patrick Stewart as the mean, tight-fisted Ebenezer Scrooge, Richard E. Grant as the put-upon Bob Cratchit, and Dominic West as Scrooge’s cheerful nephew.
The charm of this film lies in its faithfulness to Dickens’s original script and its depiction of gloomy Victorian London. Filmed just before the advent of CGI, its old-fashioned special effects enhance its sense of time gone by.
Despite the cast of well-known British actors, this was a made-for-TV movie for US networks, perhaps explaining why it’s less widely watched. Stewart was even nominated for a Screen Actors Guild award for his performance.
Limited availability on streaming platforms.
Christmas Oranges (2012)
This charming little movie is full of hope and perseverance amidst hardship, as well as an appreciation of good gifts, especially friendship and compassion.
Set in two orphanages with contrasting parental figures, the cast of children delivers commendable performances, offering warmth and wisdom suitable for all the family.
Freely available on YouTube and most streaming services.
A Smoky Mountain Christmas (1986)
If you enjoy campy fantasy entertainment, extraordinary 80s fashion, and Dolly Parton, this is the movie for you.
Made as a TV movie at the height of Parton’s fame following her success in 9 to 5, the film features her characteristic big hair, big nails, and larger-than-life charm. Dolly sings and charms her way through this family-friendly, somewhat silly, but warm-hearted movie.
Parton plays a disgruntled country singer trying to cross over into the mainstream. The story has allusions to Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs as she, her soon-to-be love interest, and seven orphaned children battle a wicked witch and a sneaky press photographer—all while singing several of her own songs.
This movie is made for fun, not the Oscars, but it’s a delightful watch.
Limited availability on streaming services.
Heather Tomlinson is a freelance Christian writer. Find more of her work at https://heathertomlinson.substack.com/ or via X (Twitter) @heathertomli.