Iliad House

Iliad House is an American radio drama series created and produced by Phil Lollar. It has been founded through a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign,[1] which sought to raise $100,000 in 30 days for a pilot and a full 12-episode season.

Iliad House
GenreRadio drama
Running timeUnder 30 minutes per episode
Country of originUnited States
Language(s)English
StarringKatie Leigh
Phil Lollar
Tracy Van Dolder
Daniel Noa
Ian Anthony Reid
Daniel Heffington
Joel Grewe
AnnouncerTami Romani
Created byPhil Lollar
Written byPhil Lollar
Narrated byPhil Lollar
No. of series1
No. of episodes6
WebsiteIliadHouse.com

Plot

Fourteen-year-old orphan Jesse Davidson lives with his emotionally distant and peculiar uncle Christopher Portalis in the Iliad House, a mysterious old mansion on an island off the east coast of the United States. Just when Jesse is finally getting used to living on the island, he discovers that the old abandoned train he and his friends have been using as a clubhouse for the past year can actually move through time.

They get caught up in a series of adventures fraught with temporal distortions, political intrigue, secret societies, and supernatural battles, all as they try to cope with the daily pressures and craziness of adolescence. While traveling through the future and the past, they learn hard truths and secrets about themselves, and that there is forgiveness and redemption available to all who desire it. And, as Jesse and his uncle come to understand each other, Jesse begins to see that there is much more to Iliad House, and to why he and his uncle are there, than anyone realizes.

Reception

Roma Downey, an Irish filmmaker and executive producer of The Bible miniseries, endorsed Iliad House and its crowdfunding campaign. She said that Lollar "tells exciting adventure stories, filled with wonder and awe, that are fun and funny, and that present biblical values in a way that our older kids can enjoy."[2]

gollark: What? No, you can probably get "better computers" just by sending better designs to TSMC.
gollark: Although you'd have to deal more with problems of electrical engineering than actual computing.
gollark: MOSFETs in 1959.
gollark: Ah, transistors are 1947.
gollark: Technologies have a lot of prerequisites.

See also

References


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