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BigBadBrian
02-19-2004, 05:56 PM
The firmness behind 'The Passion'
Brent Bozell


February 18


The mass unveiling of Mel Gibson's cinematic vision of "The Passion of the Christ" on 2,000 screens -- a massive debut for a foreign-language film with subtitles -- has the entertainment elite a bit frightened. After all, how many decades have elapsed since Hollywood has been in any way associated with Christian orthodoxy?


The one who is not frightened is Gibson. He is a man who has made his own brave and generous sacrifice, putting tens of millions of dollars and his own film career on the line for a daring and controversial cultural event. He is a man who can sit in front of Diane Sawyer as she looks like she's sucking on a lemon and honestly proclaim his humble Christian beliefs, to be a "fool for Christ" before the world. He has dared to make a film that focuses only on the last hours of Jesus, leaving the gentle preachings and healings that some like to imply are the whole of the New Testament behind, honing in just on the cruel and yet necessary crucifixion of the Christ.

For many months, media outlets have promoted controversy over this film, suggesting it might be anti-Semitic, and even if it isn't anti-Semitic in intention, it could have an anti-Semitic effect. One might argue all this controversy has been good for the film, but that doesn't mean the entertainment press has been fair or accurate in its coverage of it. Our cultural elites are worried not about how the film is "anti," but how the film is "pro." They know how this film has the potential to light a fire under traditional Christianity in America and around the world.

They are worried because millions of Americans are enthusiastic. As the media boomlet picks up this growing phenomenon, it seems to overflow with secular alienation and dread that some might be using this film to evangelize, that the filmmakers are "marketing Jesus." To the bad-taste specialists that dominate our culture, there is no dirtier word than "proselytize." That, to them, is a very "divisive" act. To the secularists, it is offensive to believe that one creed, one faith is absolutely correct, and therefore the others must be in error.

But why is it not offensive to suggest, as Hollywood so often suggests, that all religions are basically fairy tales for creepy, superstitious people who need the "crutch" of faith to deal with the natural world? And why it is not offensive for Hollywood to serve the country as a sort of 24-hour Temptation Channel for exotic sex, filthy language and pornographic violence? The entertainment factories are proselytizers -- for the lowest in human behavior. They are evangelists -- for empty sensationalism.

And isn't it odd now to see, in the wake of this powerful film, cultural critics trying to curdle its impact by suggesting that the movie, with its body count of one (not counting the Resurrection), is a gorefest? "Mel's 'Passion' for Gore 'Extreme,' He Admits," claimed the New York Daily News, mangling his words out of his ABC interview. He said he wanted people to be struck, shocked by the physical pain and suffering endured by Jesus to save each believer. The spectacle wasn't for blood-loving jollies, like the choreographed mass murder of a Quentin Tarantino film. It was intended for Christian inspiration.

The Los Angeles Times wrote that Gibson made "one of the most brutally graphic and violent depictions in modern cinema" of the last hours of Jesus. But Hollywood has almost no depictions of Jesus in "modern cinema," other than Martin Scorsese's Jesus-trashing "The Last Temptation of Christ," and that's 16 years old. To show your children explicitly Christian films requires a walk through the oldies section: "Quo Vadis" (1951), "The Robe" (1953), "Ben-Hur" (1959), or "The Greatest Story Ever Told" (1965).

Don't worry, film critics: It should be safe to assume that the crowds flocking to this R-rated movie will not be dragging their kids to see the pain inflicted in "The Passion." How wonderful it would be if Hollywood had such tender hearts for the well being of vulnerable children routinely sneaking into R-rated films with little resistance.

The secular cultural elites have reason to be frightened. Millions of Americans will be dazzled in the multiplexes watching a cast of non-stars speak in non-English about what Hollywood has seen for eons as a non-story. The hubbub should send a powerful message to Hollywood: Our culture could use more of this kind of artistic vision and exploration, and less of your nihilistic nonsense. There might be a new fad in town.

FORD
02-19-2004, 07:29 PM
Brent Bozo is a much more effective spokesman for atheism than he is for Jesus Christ. Because he's such an arrogant asshole, who would possibly want to believe in the same God he does.

Fortunately, some of us know better. We know that idiots like Bozo and his boss Pat Robertson don't speak for JC :cool:

Seshmeister
02-19-2004, 07:34 PM
It's funny how Mel Gibson took a real person from history, William Wallace, is inaccurate all over the place and gets a 'Best Film' oscar yet make a film about someone who there is no proof even existed and the shit hits the fan...:)

BigBadBrian
02-19-2004, 07:37 PM
Originally posted by Seshmeister
It's funny how Mel Gibson took a real person from history, William Wallace, is inaccurate all over the place.....

Exactly. He left out that William Wallace was gay.


Uhu uhu uhu hu hu hu uhu :p

Seshmeister
02-19-2004, 07:38 PM
We moved house recently.

The Seshmistress went along to the local church on Sunday for the first time and the minister stood up and said 'Blessed are the cheesemakers'. 'If anyone has a problem with Life of Brian then they need to lighten up.'

I like the sound of the guy...

Cheers!

:gulp:

BigBadBrian
02-19-2004, 07:43 PM
Originally posted by Seshmeister
We moved house recently.



Shit!! I'll bet it was heavy, huh? :eek: ...........;)

Seshmeister
02-19-2004, 08:00 PM
You're on fire tonight BBB...:)

Pink Spider
02-19-2004, 08:06 PM
Who cares?

When's Mad Max 4 coming out?

FORD
02-19-2004, 08:18 PM
Originally posted by Pink Spider
Who cares?

When's Mad Max 4 coming out?

You probably won't want to see it. I've seen a draft of the script, and it appears that Max and the Road Warriors have become evangelists with a "convert or die" platform. Sort of a futuristic Crusades.

Ally_Kat
02-19-2004, 11:01 PM
R-rating and that's got to be because of the crucifixion part. When I first heard about it, I wasn't too interested because I had the whole crucifixion part of Jesus shoved down my throat in elementary school. Now I want to see wtf the big deal is. He's whipped, there's a crown of thorns, I think he gets kicked around a lil bit, maybe a stone or two thrown, carries a heavy cross, nailed in, got the sword slicing his side, vinegar on the sponge-thing. Nothing new.

Hopefully this will be more interesting than the one they showed on broadcast around Easter when I was growing up.

Seshmeister
02-19-2004, 11:09 PM
Which leads to the question - why do the Jews always cry foul?

Surely there should be people claiming it's anti Italian? :)

Cheers!

:gulp:

FORD
02-19-2004, 11:53 PM
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
Exactly. He left out that William Wallace was gay.



You're only saying that because he wore a skirt and liked to blow bagpipes.

BigBadBrian
02-20-2004, 01:08 PM
Originally posted by FORD
You're only saying that because he wore a skirt and liked to blow bagpipes.

That's where the Hollywood part comes in, I believe. I've read that the Scots didn't have kilts until the 1600 or 1700's, well after William Wallace's time. Don't know how correct that is.

Dr. Love
02-20-2004, 01:13 PM
I tell you ... I fuckin' hated that Rob Roy movie. Fuckin' lame.

Seshmeister
02-20-2004, 02:17 PM
The face paint was bullshit too. And the fact that the English Queen would have had to have been pregnant for 7 years to have Wallaces kid.

Worst of all was the opening titles setting the scene which are just completely wrong.

I still loved the film I'm just saying Mel isn't famous for his accuracy.

The Patriot was full of nonsense too.

Chers!

:gulp:

FORD
02-21-2004, 11:05 AM
http://www.komotv.com/stories/29911.htm

Ken Schram Commentary: Passion For Christ? Or Cash?

February 20, 2004

By Ken Schram


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SEATTLE - He should've gone for a Happy Meal toy.

Maybe a little wind-up figure of Jesus carrying his cross.

Have you heard about all the official merchandise authorized by Mel Gibson in connection with his movie "The Passion of the Christ?"

Not only are there pewter pendants, bracelets and pins, there is also the 2 1/2-inch nail that hangs from a leather chord -- hawked as a replica of the ones used to hang Christ on the cross.

There is the Aramaic for passion mug.

And of course there's the ubiquitous T-shirt.

I don't know what it actually says.

Probably something like "I went to the crucifixion and all I got was this lousy T-shirt."

I thought Mel Gibson was joking when he told Diane Sawyer that Burger King probably wouldn't go for his "Last Supper" meal.

Now I wonder if he wasn't making some kind of thinly-veiled pitch.

If Gibson wanted this movie to be taken as a defining statement of faith, he shouldn't have relegated it to the selling of "Finding Nemo"-type trinkets.

It's just tacky.

The Passion of the Christ may turn out to be a powerful religious experience for many.

But for Mel, it's more about the sell.