NEW YORK — "The Passion of the Christ" (Newmarket) is an uncompromising,
interpretive dramatization of the final 12 hours of Jesus' earthly life.
Unflinching in its brutality and penetrating in its iconography of God's
supreme love for humanity, the film will mean different things to people of
diverse backgrounds. Co-writer, producer and director Mel Gibson has
undoubtedly created one of the most anticipated and controversial films of
recent times.
Like other films on Christ's life, "The Passion" does not simply
translate a single Gospel narrative onto the screen. Rather it is a
composite of the Passion narratives in the four Gospels embroidered with
nonscriptural traditions as well as the imaginative inspiration of the
filmmaker. The result is a deeply personal work of devotional art -- a
moving Stations of the Cross, so to speak.
However, by choosing to narrow his focus almost exclusively to the
passion of Christ, Gibson has, perhaps, muted Christ's teachings, making it
difficult for viewers unfamiliar with the New Testament and the era's
historical milieu to contextualize the circumstances leading up to Jesus'
arrest. And though, for Christians, the Passion is the central event in the
history of salvation, the "how" of Christ's death is lingered on at the
expense of the "why?"
The film employs a visceral, undiluted realism in its retelling of the
Passion, eschewing Sunday school delicacy in favor of in-your-face rawness
that is much too intense for children. That notwithstanding, the movie is an
artistic achievement in terms of its textured cinematography, haunting
atmospherics, lyrical editing, detailed production design and soulful score.
It loses nothing by using the languages of the time, Aramaic and Latin, as
the actors' expressions transcend words, saying as much if not more than the
English subtitles.
Flashbacks of Jesus’ (Jim Caviezel) public ministry and home life in
Nazareth with his mother, Mary (Maia Morgenstern), pepper the action,
filling in some of the narrative blanks. Each flashback in the film is a
welcome respite from the near-incessant bloodletting, but more importantly
for how it conveys Jesus' core message of God's boundless love for humanity,
a love that does not spare his son death on the cross so that we might have
eternal life. More of these flashbacks would have been helpful in fleshing
out the life and teachings of Jesus.
Concerning the issue of anti-Semitism, the Jewish people are at no time
blamed collectively for Jesus' death; rather, Christ himself freely embraces
his destiny, stating clearly "No one takes it (my life) from me, but I lay
it down of myself" (John 10:18). By extension, Gibson's film suggests that
all humanity shares culpability for the crucifixion, a theological stance
established by the movie's opening quotation from the prophet Isaiah which
explains that Christ was "crushed for our transgressions."
Catholics viewing the film should recall the teachings of the Second
Vatican Council's decree, "Nostra Aetate," which affirms that, "though
Jewish authorities and those who followed their lead pressed for the death
of Christ, neither all Jews indiscriminately at that time, nor Jews today,
can be charged with the crimes committed during his passion."
Overall, the film presents Jews in much the same way as any other group
-- a mix of vice and virtue, good and bad. Yet while the larger Jewish
community is shown to hold diverse opinions concerning Christ's fate --
exemplified by the cacophony of taunts and tears along the Via Dolorosa --
it fails to reflect the wider political nuances of first-century Judea. The
scene of the stock frenzied mob uniformly calling for Christ's crucifixion
in Pilate's courtyard is problematic, though once Christ begins his
laborious way of the cross Jewish individuals emerge from the crowd to
extend kindness -- including Veronica wiping his face and Simon of Cyrene
helping carry the cross, as a chorus of weeping women lament from the
sidelines.
However, the most visually distinctive representatives of Jewish
authority -- the high priest Caiphas (Matia Sbragia) and those in the
Sanhedrin aligned with him -- do come across as almost monolithically
malevolent. Caiphas is portrayed as adamant and unmerciful and his influence
on Pilate is exaggerated. Conversely, Pontius Pilate (Hristo Naumov Shopov)
is almost gentle with Jesus, even offering his prisoner a drink. This overly
sympathetic portrayal of the procurator as a vacillating, conflicted and
world-weary backwater bureaucrat, averse to unnecessary roughness and easily
coerced by both his Jewish subjects and his conscience-burdened wife, does
not mesh with the Pilate of history remembered by the ancient historians as
a ruthless and inflexible brute responsible for ordering the execution of
hundreds of Jewish rabble-rousers without hesitation.
However, while the members of the Sanhedrin are painted in villainous
shades, the film is abundantly clear that it is the Romans who are Christ's
executioners (a fact corroborated by both the Nicene Creed and the writings
of Tacitus and Josephus).
The Roman soldiers are unimaginably -- even gleefully-- sadistic in
flaying Jesus to within an inch of his life. "The Passion" is exceedingly
graphic in its portrayal of the barbarities of Roman justice. According to
Gibson, much of the visual grisliness of Christ's suffering sprung from his
own personal meditations on the passion. As depicted, the violence, while
explicit and extreme, does not seem an end in itself. It is not the kind of
violence made to look exciting, glamorized or without consequences. It
attempts to convey the depths of salvific divine love. Nonetheless, viewers'
justifiable reaction is to be repelled by such unremitting inhumanity. In
the end, such savagery may be self-defeating in trying to capture the
imagination of the everyday moviegoer.
Morgenstern's portrayal of Mary is beautifully rendered, never more so
than in the Pieta-like tableau when Christ's body is laid in her arms.
The juxtaposition of the wounded and bleeding body of Christ on the cross
with scenes of the Last Supper compellingly underscores how the Eucharist is
truly the body and blood of Christ.
Cinematically, there are flaws as well as triumphs in Gibson's film, such
as a recurring tendency to slip into the horror-genre conventions.
For those coming to the film without a faith perspective it may have
little resonance. But for Christians, "The Passion of the Christ" is likely
to arouse not only passionate opinions, but hopefully a deeper understanding
of the drama of salvation and the magnitude of God's love and forgiveness.
It is not about what men did to God, but what God endured for humanity.
Because of gory scenes of scourging, torture and crucifixion, a suicide
and some frightening images, the USCCB Office for Film & Broadcasting
classification is A-III -- adults. The Motion Picture Association of America
rating is R -- restricted.
Pare is director, DiCerto is on the staff and Navarro is a consultant for
the Office for Film & Broadcasting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops.