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To: lorne who wrote (1815)9/30/2002 10:50:08 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Respond to of 8683
 
Thursday August 8, 01:01 PM

Jesus Christ superstar - in the movies

By Victor Olliver


Mel Gibson's plan to make a Jesus Christ biopic called Passion will be yet another addition to the many depictions of the Messiah.

Mel Gibson's plan to make a Jesus Christ biopic called Passion will be yet another addition to the many depictions of the Messiah.

Given his devout Catholicism, Gibson is not likely to produce anything to upset the Pope. In fact, he's in talks with high-ups at the Vatican on the best way to approach his subject.

Oh, there's Charlton Heston as John the Baptist. And is that Pat Boone as "the young man at the tomb"? And that isn't Angela Lansbury as Claudia!

Usually, how Christ is portrayed reflects the time in which a movie is made - Teletext trawls the genre.

Hysterical, however, is John Wayne's centurion who delivers a noble line in his customary drawl at the crucifixion. It's a wonder he didn't shoot someone.

In the beginning (in the movies at least) any physical depiction of Christ was regarded as sacrilege. Remember 1953 sword 'n' sandals epic The Robe?

Monty Python's Life Of Brian (1979) is "so funny it was banned in Norway", as the tagline put it. It was not satire, just a laugh at the Christ story.

Someone called Donald C Klune was given the thankless task of performing as the shadow of Christ in a mute part. At one point we see Christ distantly on a hill as Victor Mature glowers as per usual.

Python had prepared the way with its TV show - but still many Christians were appalled by the irreverence.

But such reverence was true to the mood of Christian America - not yet subject to the iconoclasm to come.

Even some Python fans think it's an attack on religion. In fact, Python was never about attacking anything - it just assumed there was nothing that couldn't be turned into a good joke.

In Nicholas Ray's King Of Kings (1961) Christ is allowed to find his tongue at last and is depicted, rather sexily, by the handsome Jeffrey Hunter.

In movie terms, Jesus was completely reinvented in Martin Scorsese's highly controversial The Last Temptation Of Christ (1988).

There are odd omissions - spectacular miracles are few and far between (such as the parting of the sea) and there's an eccentric staring match between Christ and John the Baptist.

Scorsese's offence, in the eyes of many Christians, was to have brought to life an imperfect Messiah, an all too fallible man who lusts after Mary Magdelene and collaborates with Romans.

The movie is nothing if not entirely unquestioning of the Christ story - though surprisingly violent.

Willem Dafoe draws out a neurotic Jesus - part of a growing thesp fad to tear away image and focus on human frailty.

uk.news.yahoo.com



To: lorne who wrote (1815)9/30/2002 10:53:41 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Respond to of 8683
 
Follow-up....

Martin Scorsese's The Last Temptation of Christ
1988

When Nikos Kazantzakis publishes The Last Temptation of Christ in 1955, the Catholic Church bans it and the Greek Orthodox Church excommunicates him. Three decades later, acclaimed director Martin Scorsese releases his screen adaptation of the novel. The film, according to its prologue, "is not based on the Gospels, but upon this fictional exploration of the eternal spiritual conflict." Scorsese, known for such masterpieces as Raging Bull and Taxi Driver, portrays Jesus as a confused man who struggles against his dual nature, in thoughts more than action.

Before The Last Temptation of Christ is completed, Christian groups worldwide condemn it as blasphemous, although Christian theology teaches that Jesus is both fully human and fully divine, and that to say otherwise is heresy. Preproduction begins at Universal Studios in 1983, and until the film's release in 1988, groups affiliated with the Christian right demonstrate against The Last Temptation of Christ through petitions, phone campaigns, radio broadcasts, and street protests.

Aware of mounting organized pressure against the film, in 1987, Universal hires a liaison with the Christian community, a born-again Christian himself, and arranges a private advance screening for agitated groups, including Reverend Donald Wildmon's American Family Association and Bill Bright's Campus Crusade for Christ. The audience is especially disgusted by a closing image: Christ on the cross is tempted by Satan with visions of a "normal" life with the prostitute Mary Magdalene, replete with sex, marriage, and children. Some 1,200 Christian radio stations in California denounce the film, and Mastermedia International urges a boycott against parent company MCA. Bill Bright offers to reimburse Universal for its investment in The Last Temptation of Christ in exchange for all existing prints, which he vows to destroy. Universal responds with an open letter in newspapers across the country, saying that acquiescence to these forces would infringe on the First Amendment rights of all Americans. On the day the letter appears, more than 600 protesters, sponsored by a Christian radio station in Los Angeles, picket MCA headquarters.

The protests are effective. Edwards Theaters, with 150 theaters nationwide, refuses to screen the film, as do United Artists and General Cinemas, with 3,500 theaters between them. In August 1988, Universal opens The Last Temptation of Christ in nine major cities in the United States and Canada. The day before its premiere, Citizens for a Universal Appeal, a coalition of religious groups from Orange County, CA, stages a protest in front of Universal's L.A. headquarters that attracts some 25,000 participants. By the time The Last Temptation of Christ goes into wide release in September, the national controversy has waned, but now individual cities and towns seek bans. Among them, Savannah, GA, New Orleans, Oklahoma City, and Santa Ana, CA, succeed.

In 1989, Blockbuster Video declines to carry the film in its stores. The policy remains, though it is available for purchase on the chain's Web site. In the mid-90s, The Last Temptation of Christ reignites protests in Canada and Russia when it airs on national television. Although critics give the movie mixed reviews on aesthetic grounds, the film earns Martin Scorsese an Academy Award nomination for Best Director. And in 1997, the American Film Institute bestows upon him the Life Achievement Award, considered the highest career honor in Hollywood.

pbs.org