2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Something that all critics have missed, 31 January 2009
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Author:
Dan Dascalescu from San Jose, CA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I've read tens of reviews of "The Last Temptation of Christ": from the
Washington Post, BBCi, Chicago Sun-Times, eFilmCritic, Rotten Tomatoes,
IMDb, even FilmAtheist.com. Everyone mentioned how fundamentalist
Christians were offended by Jesus being shown naked, or making love to
Magdalene, but NONE, and I mean, NONE talked about the dialog between
Apostle Paul and Jesus.
Short background, which summarizes the first 2 (torturous) hours of the
movie: Jesus of the movie is pretty much the same Jesus depicted by the
gospels. You can safely skip the first 120 minutes of the movie if you
know the gospel story - you will not lose anything; Scorsese doesn't
bring anything new here. After the 2 hour mark, Jesus is caught by the
Romans put up on the cross. There, he has a vision of an angel, who
offers to take him off the cross and give him a chance at a normal
life. Jesus accepts, and goes on having sex with Magdalene (whom God
later kills without explanation), then with other women. He has
children and works for a living.
NOW HERE'S THE CATCH: when Jesus is perhaps in his 50s, Apostle Paul
comes preaching in his village, about - guess what - the resurrection
of Jesus, and how the resurrected Jesus will save the world. Jesus is
astonished at the lies and confronts Paul. The following dialog, the
shocking gist of the movie in my opinion, ensues after the 2h22m mark:
Paul (preaching to the crowd): And now I bring the good news to you -
it's about Jesus of Nazareth. He was not the son of Mary, He was the
son of God! [...] And He was punished for our sins. Then He was
tortured and crucified. But three days later He rose up from the dead
and went up to Heaven! Death was conquered! Amen!
Jesus: Did you ever see this Jesus of Nazareth, after He came back from
the dead? I mean, with your own eyes?
Paul: No, but I saw a light that blinded me. and I heard His voice.
Jesus: You're a liar.
Paul: His disciples saw Him. They were hiding in an attic with the
doors locked. He appeared to them.
Jesus (going away): Liar. He's a liar!
Paul (running after Jesus): Wait a minute, I wanna talk to you!
Jesus (grabbing Paul by the throat): I was never crucified, I never
came back from the dead. I'm a man, like everybody else. Why are you
telling these lies?
Paul: What are you talking about?
Jesus: I'm the son of Mary and Joseph. I'm the one who preached in
Galilee. I had followers, we marched on Jerusalem, Pilate condemned me
and God saved me.
Paul: No you didn't.
Jesus: Who are you talking about?! DON'T TRY TO TELL ME WHAT HAPPENED
TO ME, BECAUSE I KNOW. I live like a man now. I work, eat, have
children. [...] So don't go around telling lies about me. Or I'll tell
everybody the truth.
And here it is, RELIGION IN THE MAKING:
Paul: Look around you. Look at all these people. Look at their faces.
Do you see how unhappy they are, how much they're suffering? Their only
hope is the resurrected Jesus. I don't care whether you're Jesus or
not. The resurrected Jesus will save the world, and that's what
matters.
Jesus: Those are lies. You can't save the world by lying.
Paul: I CREATED the truth out of what people needed and what they
believed.
If I have to crucify you to save the world, I'll crucify you. And if I
have to resurrect you, then I'll do that too, whether you like it or
not.
Jesus: I won't let you. I'll tell everyone the truth.
Paul: Go ahead. Go on. Tell them now. Who's going to believe you? You
started all this; now you can't stop it. All those people who believe
me will grab you and kill you.
Jesus: No, that wouldn't happen.
Paul: How do you know? You see, you don't know how much people NEED
God. You don't know how happy He can make them. He can make them happy
to do anything. He can make them happy to die, and they'll die. All for
the sake of Christ. Jesus Christ. Jesus of Nazareth. The Son of God.
The Messiah. Not you. Not for your sake. [...] My Jesus is much more
important and much more powerful.
There you have it - how Christianity started. If Jesus existed at all,
he was an ordinary preacher, who got crucified, and died. But a hopeful
story survived, took over truth and reality, and got repeated ad
nauseam to the point of very few questioning its origins.
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