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THE BEST PICTURE: WHY NO CHRISTIANS NEED APPLY
CATHOLIC EXCHANGE ^ | 2/25/05 | JAMES BEMIS

Posted on 02/25/2005 11:22:14 AM PST by jbemis

THE BEST PICTURE

BY JAMES BEMIS

When this year’s Academy Award nominees were announced, many were shocked Mel Gibson’s THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST was not nominated for a single major award. The movie, which chronicled Jesus’ last twelve hours, took the cinematic world by storm.

BREAKING AN UNSPOKEN TABOO

Because the movie was filmed in Latin and Aramaic with no big-name stars, Hollywood insiders figured producer and director Gibson was throwing away his $30 million investment. However, upon general release in February 2004, it was obvious something extraordinary had occurred: THE PASSION was not only a box office smash but the film succeeded brilliantly as cinema.

Gibson expertly puts us at Ground Zero of the last twelve hours in Christ’s life. In his wisdom, the director played it straight, letting the gripping Passion narrative unfold just as it has been passed down through the ages – thankfully, there’s hardly a modern touch found anywhere in the film.

In taking Christianity seriously, however, “The Passion” broke Hollywood’s unspoken taboo. Controversy raged about whether the film was “anti-Semitic.” But whether people loved or hated the film, most agreed it was extraordinarily powerful cinema. The question was not if the film would be nominated for major awards, but how many.

Then came January 26’s startling news: THE PASSION was nominated for three minor awards but no major ones. Few imagined Hollywood’s bias against Christianity was so big – and its elite so small – that THE PASSION would be virtually snubbed when the Academy Award nominations were announced. Was 2004 such a stellar year for the movies that a great cinematic achievement like THE PASSION could be ignored?

THE SECOND-RATE COMPETITION

Hardly. The five films nominated for 2004’s Best Picture are – at best – second-rate, forgettable as last week’s leftovers. RAY, for instance, is simply a mediocre bio-pic of the sort – albeit seamier – Hollywood used to churn out by the dozens: THE GLENN MILLER STORY, THE BENNY GOODMAN STORY, THE GENE KRUPA STORY, THE EDDY DUCHIN STORY, etc. (None of these – including RAY – holds a candle to “YANKEE DOODLE DANDY,” though.) You never forget you’re watching a movie about Ray Charles: Despite all the acting accolades, Jamie Foxx seems far too delicate and insubstantial for the role of a tough, complex giant like Ray Charles. As one who loves Charles’ music, I wanted to like the movie but found it trite and unmoving. Most viewers would better understand “The Genius” by listening to a greatest hits CD rather than watching this anemic film.

It says much about the corrupted state of our culture that Clint Eastwood’s MILLION DOLLAR BABY is considered mainstream. The story involves the freakish sport of female boxing, an activity that would be unthinkable in a civilized society. None of the athletes exhibit even the faintest hint of feminine virtue, but instead talk, act and think like undersized men with mammeries. Worse, the film smiles upon the “mercy killing” of an invalid by the nominally Catholic “hero.” The message: Once you’ve lost the ability to earn big bucks pulverizing women in a boxing ring, then life just ain’t worth living. This is deep thinking, Hollywood-style.

Finally, director Eastwood can’t resist taking cheap shots at the Catholic Church. As in last year’s MYSTIC RIVER, a priest is disparaged: This time, he’s made to appear immature and so ignorant he can’t explain the doctrine of the Trinity or the Immaculate Conception to a pesky parishioner. In short, MILLION DOLLAR BABY is a thoroughly repulsive film.

Martin Scorsese’s THE AVIATOR is similar to Howard Hughes’ Spruce Goose: so overblown it hardly gets airborne. This leaden biography of Hughes (played by Leonardo DiCaprio) is a cartoonish, indulgent, almost amateurish production. DiCaprio’s hair looks like it was dyed with shoe polish. In the second lead role, Cate Blanchett’s caricature of Katherine Hepburn is uproariously incompetent. Like every movie Scorsese has made since 1980’s great RAGING BULL, this film is too long, too loud, and too lumbering. Nothing in it rings true. Put another way, THE AVIATOR, as they say, must be seen to be disbelieved.

Critically acclaimed SIDEWAYS reveals more about its admirers than it does about human nature. The story revels in degradation - of marriage, friendship, courtship, family, etc. You name it, SIDEWAYS demeans it. Ostensibly about two friends on a week-long wine tasting binge before one’s wedding, the wretched SIDEWAYS is a sort of upscale PORKY’S, replete with foul language, naked fat slobs, animal-like carnality and juvenile high-jinks by two thoroughly unlikable male leads. If this is the “cultural landmark” many are saying, conservatives must ask whether American society has much left worth conserving.

FINDING NEVERLAND, a story about “Peter Pan” creator J. M. Barrie, is a thin but rewarding film, featuring an excellent performance by Johnny Depp – the first role I’ve seen in which he doesn’t grossly overact. Another highlight is the extraordinary performance by Freddie Highmore as a member of the family that inspires Barrie to write “Peter Pan.” NEVERLAND is an enjoyable and touching movie, but ultimately is rather insubstantial.

RELISHING RELIGIOUS BIGOTRY

By any artistic standard, THE PASSION is far superior to any of the films nominated as Best Picture. Why the cold-shoulder? First, part of the wailing over the movie was veiled envy from an embarrassed Hollywood establishment, those makers of infantile comedies and seductive trivialities who saw what a real filmmaker could do. Watching THE PASSION is an unforgettable experience: It demonstrates the heights that cinema is capable of but rarely achieves, especially these days.

Second, THE PASSION’S snubbing puts the lie to the Hollywood establishment’s reputed “tolerance.” In fact, a hostile blacklisting of Gibson and other Christians now occurring is far more hideous than anything happening during the supposed “Dark Ages” of the McCarthy blacklisting era because it is done out of religious intolerance. Over the years, observers have noted how Hollywood executives relish producing films that undermine, demean, and ridicule the Christian faith. This year the mask is ripped off and we see the bared fangs of religious bigotry in all its grisly and vivid ugliness. In a year when a great film like THE PASSION so obviously should have been honored, Tinseltown’s elites instead chose five forgettable films as the finest they had to offer. Faced with an opportunity to rise above their prejudices for a change, the Academy – to its everlasting shame - took a flyer.

The 2004 Academy Awards forever will be remembered as when the year’s best picture wasn’t nominated as Best Picture.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: academyawards; antichristianbigotry; antisemitism; cinema; giveitarest; hollyweird; hollywood; movies; oscars; popularculture; thepassion
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Comment #21 Removed by Moderator

To: kellynla
Today's Hollyweird crowd hates Catholicism... Hollywood hates God!
22 posted on 02/25/2005 11:59:11 AM PST by Free_at_last_-2001 (is clinton in jail yet?)
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To: jbemis

ping


23 posted on 02/25/2005 12:01:11 PM PST by ColoCdn (Neco eos omnes, Deus suos agnoset)
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To: FreedomSurge
If Hollywood nominated THE PASSION it would be seen as a slap to the Jewish community.

Not nominating could be seen as a slap to the Christian community.

24 posted on 02/25/2005 12:02:12 PM PST by ladyjane
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To: frogjerk
You'd be surprised at the number of clowns in LA wearing a cross around their neck and they wouldn't know where the nearest church was if you gave them a map! LOL
And the same goes for the Jews with the star of David... Most of the young Jews in the "industry" haven't seen the inside of a synagogue since their bar mitzvah! LOL
Yep, it's all just accessories to these morons...
25 posted on 02/25/2005 12:02:39 PM PST by kellynla (U.S.M.C. 1st Battalion,5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Div. Viet Nam 69&70 Semper Fi)
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To: jbemis

The author needs to understand that since the Passion is not in English it doesn't qualify for best picture. Since it is not in any language currently spoken on the planet, it doesn't qualify as a foreign film.

Why does everyone have to go into spasms when their favorite film isn't nominated. Big whoo. Most of the Best Pictures of the past 20 years really sucked.


26 posted on 02/25/2005 12:05:27 PM PST by Hillary's Lovely Legs (I don't support gay male prostitutes, beating up people in strip bars or poor grammar.)
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To: jbemis

The Passion was one of the best movies I have ever seen.

To fail to acknowlege that brings shame to the awards themselves.


27 posted on 02/25/2005 12:05:53 PM PST by Mr. K (this space for rent)
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To: ex-snook

"Well OK if all you saw was just 'a guy'."


Yep. Just an actor, like I see jsut about every movie. Sorry - I just wasn't blown away by watching Jesus get beaten and killed.


28 posted on 02/25/2005 12:19:20 PM PST by Blzbba (Don't hate the player - hate the game!)
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To: Mr. K

Let's face it, the people who select the winners don't get the Passion much less the movie which depicts it.


29 posted on 02/25/2005 12:19:48 PM PST by freedomfiter2
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To: Hillary's Lovely Legs
Since it is not in any language currently spoken on the planet, it doesn't qualify as a foreign film.

Aramaic survives as a spoken language in small communities in Syria, Iraq, Turkey and Iran. Aramaic Language. Do not know how dissimiliar it is to Biblical Aramaic (the Aramaic used in the film?).

Vatican City uses Latin to some degree, no? But I wasn't sure if the film used a Classical Latin pronunciation or not--it sounded different, but didn't necessarily sound like Church Latin either.

My guess is the film is predominantly "Aramaic", but it is in fact bilingual. For the academy to discriminate against a polylingual, mostly dead language film, is the height of intolerance.

30 posted on 02/25/2005 2:08:49 PM PST by nonsporting
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To: nonsporting
For the academy to discriminate against a polylingual, mostly dead language film, is the height of intolerance.

It didn't meet the criteria. It's not intolerant, it's the rules. Movies don't have to win Oscars to be popular movies, usually the Oscar movies are boring.

31 posted on 02/25/2005 2:14:23 PM PST by Hillary's Lovely Legs (I don't support gay male prostitutes, beating up people in strip bars or poor grammar.)
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To: nonsporting

....'For the academy to discriminate against a polylingual, mostly dead language film, is the height of intolerance.'....

Why is this the height of intolerance? Polylingual, mostly dead language speakers, are probably one of the smallest groups on earth, and I haven't heard any of them complain.


32 posted on 02/25/2005 2:15:58 PM PST by stuartcr
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To: Darkwolf377
I disagree.

Now days Hollywood rarely makes a great movie unless it is by mistake.
People must be really bored with life to shell out $8 to $12 dollars on wasted film.
How many more stinkers like the Folkers or other tripe, will these unimaginative left wingers put out.

I see better Made For TV movies on Lifetime.

I got talked into putting in cable and taking the various movie channels.

That did not last long as I did not want my children using any of those Hollywood actors as role models.

Takes a fairly dumbed down person to like most of what Hollywood puts out.
33 posted on 02/25/2005 2:21:18 PM PST by OKIEDOC (LL THE)
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To: Hillary's Lovely Legs
It didn't meet the criteria. It's not intolerant, it's the rules. Movies don't have to win Oscars to be popular movies, usually the Oscar movies are boring.

Wasn't my sarcasm obvious?

34 posted on 02/25/2005 2:26:42 PM PST by nonsporting
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To: stuartcr
Why is this the height of intolerance? Polylingual, mostly dead language speakers, are probably one of the smallest groups on earth, and I haven't heard any of them complain.

Someone must represent "them." They probably don't have TV, and definitely don't have access to the internet.

35 posted on 02/25/2005 2:29:30 PM PST by nonsporting
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To: nonsporting

How would we know if they are offended and feel the need for representation? Maybe they like their anonymity..


36 posted on 02/25/2005 2:34:28 PM PST by stuartcr
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To: jbemis
FINDING NEVERLAND, a story about “Peter Pan” creator J. M. Barrie, is a thin but rewarding film, featuring an excellent performance by Johnny Depp – the first role I’ve seen in which he doesn’t grossly overact. Another highlight is the extraordinary performance by Freddie Highmore as a member of the family that inspires Barrie to write “Peter Pan.” NEVERLAND is an enjoyable and touching movie, but ultimately is rather insubstantial.

I would never categorize Johnny Depp as an overactor. He just isn't. His portrayal of the Jack Sparrow in PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN was meant to be over the top and he was brilliant. Finding Neverland was a beautiful movie and I recommend it to everyone.

37 posted on 02/25/2005 2:37:23 PM PST by Hildy
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To: OKIEDOC
"Takes a fairly dumbed down person to like most of what Hollywood puts out."

OK. What's this got to do with my post about Scorsese?

38 posted on 02/25/2005 3:09:31 PM PST by Darkwolf377 (Condi Rice: Yeaaahhh, baybee! http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1350654/posts)
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To: stuartcr
How would we know if they are offended and feel the need for representation? Maybe they like their anonymity..

We can ask them.

As to their anonymity: Some linguist(s) must have payed them recent visits, and identified their spoken language. They probably couldn't care less about the Acadamy. However, they might want know there is now a film made in their native language. They may have trouble with the Latin, and subtitles may need to be translated into Aramaic. I don't recall that menu option.

39 posted on 02/25/2005 3:30:01 PM PST by nonsporting
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To: Hillary's Lovely Legs

Another point they need to consider: only the top 5 vote getters in the preliminary voting qualify for the final ballot. For all we know, "Passion" could have made the top 10 in the preliminary voting.


40 posted on 02/25/2005 5:16:26 PM PST by EveningStar
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