David Warren on “The Passion”

David Warren has not seen Mel Gibson’s “The Passion” yet, but he nevertheless has penned the best review of the movie that I read to date.

More on “The Passion”

Following on yesterday’s post about Mel Gibson‘s new movie, “The Passion,” neither the Chronicle nor the NY Times reviewers were particularly impressed from a filmmaking standpoint. From the Chronicle review:

It’s a stylish and visually polished re-creation of the last 12 hours in the life of Jesus — unrelieved suffering and martyrdom, in other words. Controversy over whether it will inflame anti-Semitism guarantees huge audiences, and many people may be profoundly moved. But as a film it is quite bad.
It isn’t awful merely because of Gibson’s obsessive need to zoom in and linger on bloodletting, although this makes it difficult to watch. It’s awful because everything he knows about storytelling has been swept aside by proselytizing zeal. Without doubt, this is a heartfelt expression of religious faith, but it is so naked an expression — untempered by detached, mediating intelligence — that it speaks solely to the converted.

And the NY Times review adds:

“The Passion of the Christ” is so relentlessly focused on the savagery of Jesus’ final hours that this film seems to arise less from love than from wrath, and to succeed more in assaulting the spirit than in uplifting it. Mr. Gibson has constructed an unnerving and painful spectacle that is also, in the end, a depressing one. It is disheartening to see a film made with evident and abundant religious conviction that is at the same time so utterly lacking in grace.

But Kenneth L. Woodward observes in this NY Times op-ed that the public’s interest in the movie is due largely to the sanitized versions of Christianity that are so prevalant in America today:

Mr. Gibson’s raw images invade our religious comfort zone, which has long since been cleansed of the Gospels’ harsher edges. Most Americans worship in churches where the bloodied body of Jesus is absent from sanctuary crosses or else styled in ways so abstract that there is no hint of suffering. In sermons, too, the emphasis all too often is on the smoothly therapeutic: what Jesus can do for me.
More than 60 years ago, H. Richard Neibuhr summarized the creed of an easygoing American Christianity that has in our time triumphantly come to pass: “A God without wrath brought men without sin into a kingdom without judgment though the ministrations of a Christ without a cross.” Despite its muscular excess, Mr. Gibson’s symbol-laden film is a welcome repudiation of all that.
Indeed, Mr. Gibson’s film leaves out most of the elements of the Jesus story that contemporary Christianity now emphasizes. His Jesus does not demand a “born again” experience, as most evangelists do, in order to gain salvation. He does not heal the sick or exorcise demons, as Pentecostals emphasize. He doesn’t promote social causes, as liberal denominations do. He certainly doesn’t crusade against gender discrimination, as some feminists believe he did, nor does he teach that we all possess an inner divinity, as today’s nouveau Gnostics believe. One cannot imagine this Jesus joining a New Age sunrise Easter service overlooking the Pacific.
Like Jeremiah, Jesus is a Jewish prophet rejected by the leaders of his own people, and abandoned by his handpicked disciples. Besides taking an awful beating, he is cruelly tempted to despair by a Satan whom millions of church-going Christians no longer believe in, and dies in obedience to a heavenly Father who, by today’s standards, would stand convicted of child abuse. In short, this Jesus carries a cross that not many Christians are ready to share.

The religious website beliefnet has been sponsoring an online debate over The Passion and the theological issues it raises. The participants are two scholars representing diverse theological and academic perspectives. John Dominic Crossan is a well-known liberal New Testament scholar whose approach to Jesus is creative, but rather bizarre and skeptical. Ben Witherington III is an outstanding academic from Asbury Theological Seminary who advocates orthodox Christian theology. These two scholars are publishing a measured dialogue that is must reading for people who want to wrestle with the serious issues raised by The Passion of the Christ.

Go Texan Day is this Friday

Houston has grown into a remarkably diverse city, but its heritage as a quintessential Texas city is reflected best by the annual Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. Unless you are a Houstonian, it’s a bit difficult to explain “the Rodeo,” as Houstonians call it. But it’s an event that lasts almost three weeks each March, involves volunteer efforts of thousands of Houstonians, brings hundreds of thousands of people into Houston, raises millions of dollars for academic scholarships, and provides some of the most interesting and unique entertainment that one could ever imagine.
Started in the early 1930’s in downtown Houston, the Rodeo has grown into a huge event that literally envelopes the entire Reliant Park complex, including Reliant Stadium and the adjacent convention facility. The Rodeo kicks off with 5,000 trailriders descending on Houston’s Memorial Park this Friday, which is “Go Texan Day” in Houston in which most folks go to work in some type of cowboy attire. After a wild night of campfire parties at Memorial Park, the Trailriders ride the five miles down Memorial Drive to downtown Houston early Saturday morning for the annual Rodeo Parade, which is great fun. Then, it’s off to the Rodeo at Reliant Park.
The Rodeo always has a first rate lineup of entertainers who perform after each night of the rodeo event, and this year is no exception. However, this year is particularly special for me in that rising country music star Dierks Bentley is one of the headline performers. Dierks is the younger brother of an old friend of mine, Houston real estate attorney Bart Bentley, who happens to be a pretty fair guitarist himself in the popular Houston rock band, Mid-Life Crisis and the Hot Flashes.
Although my teenage daughters undoubtedly will want to see Dierks’ show at the Rodeo, I most enjoy the Livestock Show in the Reliant Convention facility while visiting the Rodeo. Over the years, I have seen more incredible animals in the Livestock Show than in any zoo that I have ever visited.
Accordingly, if you are visiting Houston during March, do not miss the opportunity to visit the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. Not only will you be highly entertained, but you will learn more about Texas in general and Houston in particular than you could anywhere else.

Houston Symphony announces 2004-05 Season

The Houston Symphony has announced its 2004-05 season. The Symphony has gone through a tough financial stretch over the past couple of years, but it is a class organization and deserving of Houstonians’ generous support. The Symphony plays in Houston’s venerable Jones Hall, which is located in the heart of Houston’s downtown Theatre District.

Museum of Fine Arts receives huge gift

The Houston Chronicle reports on Houston’s Museum of Fine Artsannouncement of the late Caroline Wiess Law‘s bequest of almost 60 artworks valued at between $60-85 million. Mrs. Law was a daughter of Harry Wiess, one of the founders of Humble Oil Co., the predecessor to Exxon Mobil. Mr. Wiess and his wife Olga were founding members of the Museum of Fine Arts, which has grown into the centerpiece of Houston’s Museum District just north of the Texas Medical Center.

The Super Bowl of Dog Shows

Having Super Bowl hangover? Check out the Westminster Dog Show this evening on USA Network. The Houston Chronicle reports on the increasingly popular event, which was hilariously depicted in Christopher Guest’s spoof documentary, Best in Show. This is very good dog–and people–watching.

The Producers is a Great Show

In a prior post, I noted that The Producers is playing at the Hobby Center the next couple of weeks. One of my sons, my wife and I went to this past Friday’s performance, and it is truly a great show. Even Everett Evans, the Chronicle’s tough theatre critic, gives the show a spectacular review. This is Broadway at its finest, so don’t miss it.

Ebert Likes “Miracle on Ice”

The Chicago Sun Times movie critic Roger Ebert gives a thumbs up in this review of “Miracle on Ice“, the new movie about the 1980 gold medal winning U.S. Olympic Hockey Team.
Of course, a couple of my brothers will contend that no hockey movie can ever surpass this classic, which includes these legendary characters.

The Producers is in Town!

Mel Brooks’ Tony Award winning (Best Musical of 2001) smash hit musical, The Producers, started a two and half week run in Houston this week. It is a part of the fabulous Hobby Center’s annual Broadway Series. The Producers was originally one of Brooks’ first movies, and Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder’s performances in that 1968 classic helped make it into a cult comedy classic. Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick reprised Mostel and Wilder’s roles when Brooks turned the show into a musical and the play took Broadway by storm during the 2001 season, winning a record 12 Tony Awards. This is a great show, and my family and I are looking forward to enjoying it while it is in Houston.

Halftime Show Controversy

Author Crispin Sartwell pretty much reflects my thinking in this piece on the dreadful Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show. Meanwhile, Janet Jackson’s show ending performance has set at least one type of record, which is described here.