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I see dead lesbian cliches
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I see dead lesbian cliches
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As to the historicity, there were a few technical flaws, e.g. the focus on Mary and the fact that we know very little about what happened on the road to Golgotha, but the rest of the film was relatively accurate according to Biblical standards. Mind you, by historicity, I mean the fact that Gibson says he based it on the gospels and that is the standard by which i look at it.
I saw it more as a few men sought to bend the will of a Roman governor and a mob in order to achieve their ends.
. . . and happily practicing Christian (Episcopalian-rah!)
OutWillow: Hey Buff. One more thing. Buffy: Yeah? Willow: I’m gay. Buffy: Okay, Will. Xander owes me ten bucks.
~Remember to Breathe by Yellow Crayon
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Thank you for starting this thread. I was thinking about it, but I was hesitant. I know that there are alot of different beliefs on the Kitten, but mine is the same as yours.
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Web Warlock
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Dekalog: Agreed. This film should have been rated NC-17 for violence. The censors in North America are willing to put an R on blinding amounts of violence but ready to put NC-17 on sex in a heartbeat. "Henry and June" hardly merited an NC-17 nor does Bertolucci's "Dreamers". The latter got an NC-17 for The film has been stamped with an NC-17 rating for its explicit sexual content (shots of male and female genitalia) and lovemaking that leaves nothing to the imagination. Yet a movie can show a man being crucified on screen in gory and explicit detail and this is not considered obscene?! Violence has always been OK but not sexual content. I've also noticed that a higher rating is usually considered for more explicit GLBT sex than is given equally explicit heterosexual sex scenes. It's not suprising that there is so much resistance to gay marrage give the attitudes tworards sex and embracing of violence in US culture.Quote:
This film underlies for me how, in North America at least, we seem content to become increasing violent, but are frightened and ashamed by sexuality.
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I see dead lesbian cliches
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The real model for this film is Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, with its
relentless depiction of torture, along with every slasher movie that
cloaks its intentions in a higher message. Violence has become the
measure of verisimilitude. If it's bloody, it looks real. This illusion
allows us to enjoy what violence does provide: pleasure. If it weren't
so exhilarating, it wouldn't be so popular.
Many people who would never attend a Bible movie will flock to this one
because they get to see a man tormented by men as others look lustfully
on. The faithful will sublimate this sadomasochistic sensation into
religious ecstasy and find it profoundly moving. Either way, Gibson
wins. He's made a spectacle of joy in pain-the essence of boffo.
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I see dead lesbian cliches
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I don’t know... maybe it just disturbs me that MONTY PYTHON’S LIFE OF BRIAN offers a better, more complete and accurate view of the political and social structures against which the Christ story played out.
Willow: Hey Buff. One more thing. Buffy: Yeah? Willow: I’m gay. Buffy: Okay, Will. Xander owes me ten bucks.
~Remember to Breathe by Yellow Crayon
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"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."
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"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
Willow: Hey Buff. One more thing. Buffy: Yeah? Willow: I’m gay. Buffy: Okay, Will. Xander owes me ten bucks.
~Remember to Breathe by Yellow Crayon
), while his soldiers would have spoken Vulgar Latin, although they could certainly understand the "educated" speech of the Procurator.
Time flies by when the Devil drives.
It's not the pace of life that concerns me, it's the sudden stop at the end.
Mr Pitt's statements are the argument in a nutshell for me. Different folks will see a different film depending a great deal on what their religion is. He doesn't agree with the charge of anti-semitism but he addresses it and doesn't dismiss it out of hand. I wish more of the gay rags had shown this kind of even handedness in discussing the dead lesbian cliche. It's simply not a viewpoint that can and more importantly should not be ignored IMHO.Quote:
Similarly, as someone who'll never experience anti-Semitism, I don't know that I have standing to say there's none in Gibson's movie. But I didn't see any. And anybody making that charge will have to go some to convince me.
Which is not to say I'm without empathy for the fears expressed by some in the Jewish community. To the contrary, those fears offer a visceral and poignant reminder of how tenuous a thing acceptance can be, how fierce a grip history can have. Jews have made inroads into the nation's mainstream to a degree that would have been unimaginable 50 years ago. Yet even in the midst of that success, they live with this constant nugget of fear, this need to be on guard, lest acceptance erode and yesterday's nightmares come roaring back.
I can relate.
But there's something critics of The Passion, Jewish and otherwise, are missing. Namely, that this movie -- there's no delicate way to say this -- was not made for them -- or for that matter, for Muslims or atheists. It is deliberately exclusionary to a degree I've seldom seen. You didn't have to be Jewish to get Schindler's List or African-American to get Roots. Being those things might have deepened your appreciation, but they were not necessary.
To understand The Passion, though, you need at least familiarity with the four Gospels and, ideally, faith in them. The movie does not concern itself with back story; it assumes that you come to it with a certain body of knowledge.
Otherwise, all you will see is a man being hit over and over and over again, such extravagantly brutal torture that you cringe and pray for it to be done. But it never is. There is always another blow, a fresh gout of blood. If you know the Gospels, however, you might see something more than violence. You might see the embodiment of Christ's message. Which was not simply ''love and faith'' but redemption, ransom, sacrifice, the willingness to take upon Himself, upon His body, punishment for all the sins of humankind.
I'll leave it to others to argue whether it makes sense to exclude so many people. I will say only that within its narrow confines, The Passion is a work of shattering immediacy and devastating power.
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
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