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In theology and history, the Passion
of Christ describes His suffering, specifically the physical and spiritual agonies and
indignities of His final hours, culminating in His crucifixion. Mel Gibsons Passion is nearly two hours of watching Jesus
body being reduced to a bloody pulp. The film takes its narrative raw materials from the
tradition of the European Passion plays and some scenes of the crowds of Jews echo
historic photographs of the Oberammergau festival of
one hundred years ago. However, Gibson plunders the visual vaults of Cinemascope-era
Hollywood to produce just another over-hyped Hollywood blockbuster.
The film is a virtual catalogue
of Christian iconography of the American evangelical school, piling up one living tableau
after another, from Michelangelos Pieta
to the crowds of hypocritical Pharisees straight out of Griffiths
Intolerance. Gibson states he was so impressed
by Pasolinis The Gospel According to St. Matthew that he
used the same locations. For all that, this film is firmly rooted in the fantasy
traditions of such predecessors as Raiders of the Lost Ark, Terminator, and Triumph of the Will. James Caviezel was chosen
for the Jesus role, in part, because he betrays hints neither of the Semite-appearing
Jesuses of Byzantine iconography nor of the androgynous Jesuses of Carravaggio. In a
flashback near the end of the film, there's a head shot of Caviezel looking like Warner
Sallmans model for his 1941 Head
of Christthat firmly athletic, and firmly WASP, vision of an American
Christ.
Gibsons Passion is
just thatthe richness of the Jesus material is diluted to broad, shallow brush
strokes; only that which dramatizes the physical agony and suffering is included. There is
scant dialogue and there is no plot or character development. Gibson delivers the broadest
cliches, telling his story almost purely in images, all the more emotionally overwhelming
because the camera caresses the violence and lingers lovingly and obsessively on each and
every assault and injury on Caviezels body.
The film depicts a man being persecuted by a bunch of angry,
revenge-bent Jews whose leader is implacable. This Jesus person must die for
blaspheming. The Jews (presumably the Biblical Pharisees) insist that the
Roman leaders take responsibility and execute Jesus. Gibsons Roman leaders (as
opposed to the sadistic legionnaires) are reasonable and modern and, well, leader-like,
especially when contrasted to the portrayal of iron-willed, intolerant and vindictive
Jews. Pilate seems a very reasonable and politically astute man who bends over backwards
to give Jesus every opportunity to slip out of the noose. Jesus resolutely refuses.
Indeed, the overall impression the film creates is that Jesus and the Pharisees
leader are locked in a personal battle of wills in which Jesus is going to prove himself
rightbeing grievously wrongedeven if it kills him, literally.
Media hype has focused on the purported gratuitous violence of the
film, but how can a film that explicitly states it is about the agony and suffering of
Christ not be applauded for a rare bit of truth
in advertising of Hollywood Bible flicks? In fact, in the tradition of Riefenstahl, this
film is, by turns, very pretty or sublimely beautiful to look at. However, the cast of
characters is remarkably Disneyesque. Jesus is betrayed by his closest friends and
charismatically inspires total strangers, simply by allowing them into his presence. (This
is much the effect the film seems to have on its current admirerssimply witnessing
the film is enough to elicit rapturous conviction.) His mother sacrifices in endless
silence and dogged devotion. John is puerile and ever at the ready. Herod, portrayed as a
bitchy queen, surrounds himself with fellow freaks and perverts. Gibson adds a
blue-skinned, androgynous Satan, played by Rosalinda Celentano, in the garb of a stock
sci-fi alien type. By the end of the film Jesus has come to resemble Popeye, one eye
swollen shut, the other computer-enhanced to create an eerily glowing, otherworldly-dreamy
visionarys eye. The more he is reduced to mincemeat, the more
athletically serene he appears in crosscut flashbacksbefore-and-after
imagery on steroids.
Gibsons Passion is
blatantly propagandistic, while coyly demurring any such thing. Perhaps the creepiest
aspect of the film is its unflinching, unblinking, all-seeing eye of God-the-Son. The
films value clearly lies in its role as media event and object for endless spin,
from every camp in the current United States cultural wars. That is has been crafted and
is being hyped in the tradition of Birth of a Nation or Triumph of the Will is about as creepy as it gets.
- Les Wright