Sunday, February 27, 2011

CUTAWAYS: 976-EVIL II

Um, if you in any way hold It’s A Wonderful Life to be sacrosanct, then perhaps it’s best if you skip the following clip. However, if you don’t mind seeing a time-honored piece of movie history get goofed on, and especially if you happen to know the original Night Of The Living Dead frame by frame, then by all means, press play and enjoy.

Seriously, do you have any idea how hard it’s going to be now to watch Capra’s Christmas classic without hearing Leslie Ryan’s voice in my head yelling out “No, Zuzu, no!”? Oh well, it’s still just a movie. Really no big deal when things are said and done.

Unfortunately, in the real world, when some mental images get tainted, they can’t be recovered from so easily. In the recent book Light Of The World, when asked to comment on the sex abuse scandals which have rocked the Catholic Church over the past decade, Pope Benedict XVI admitted, “It was really almost like the crater of a volcano, out of which suddenly a tremendous cloud of filth came, darkening and soiling everything, so that above all the priesthood suddenly seemed to be a place of shame and every priest was under the suspicion of being one like that too… It is a particularly serious sin when someone who is actually supposed to help people toward God… abuses him instead and leads him away from the Lord. As a result the faith as such becomes unbelievable, and the Church can no longer present herself credibly as the herald of the Lord.”

You see, the Pope recognizes that even though the Church has made steps to minister to and compensate the victims, as well as address the problem internally so as to eliminate as much as possible the chance of such a thing happening again, the scandal has left an indelible taint on the mental image many hold of the Catholic Church. Hell, you can’t toss a rock these days without hitting some desperately “cutting edge” comedian making pedophile priests jokes (Come back to us Dennis Leary. I’ve seen The Ref four times, so I know you can be funny sometimes.). All in all, it can get pretty disheartening for someone who holds the faith dear.

But when asked if the scandals, along with the ensuing media onslaught, ever made him consider retiring, Benedict answered simply “One can resign at a peaceful moment or when one simply cannot go on. But one must not run away from danger and say that someone else should do it… I think that whereas we must not minimize the evil and must sorrowfully acknowledge it, by the same token we must also still be grateful for how much light streams forth from the Catholic Church and should make that visible.” And as for those “who have only these negative perceptions, no longer see then the overall picture, the life of the Church. All the more reason that the Church must strive to make this vitality and greatness visible again, despite all that is negative.”

So, fair or not, that is the burden and calling of this generation of Catholics, to shine forth through the example of our daily lives in order to refocus the attention of the world on what is good and true within Christianity, so that the image the world holds of our faith is the original one put forth by Jesus and not the re-envisioned one that has resulted from the scandals. Easy? Nope. Probably not going to happen in our lifetime. But we’re the ones who have to get the ball rolling. And considering the heavy hitters on our side (God, the angels, and over 10,000 named saints), I think we’ll do okay.

It’s A Wonderful Life, on the other hand, is toast. No, Zuzu, no!

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

SHORT FEATURE: DR. TONGUE'S 3D HOUSE OF STEWARDESSES

In honor of the upcoming review of 4D Man, we present for your viewing pleasure the SCTV classic Dr. Tongue's 3D House of Stewardesses. Because, you know,  3D is a lot like 4D, just… 1D less. Whatever, it’s worth it just to see Catherine O'Hara break character and start to crack up during the terrifying clothes ripping scene.

What goes around comes around, I suppose. This skit’s about 30 years old, and yet here we are in 2011, smack dab in the middle of another era of 3-D movies desperately in need of ridicule. Even James Cameron, who made the the biggest 3-D movie of all time, thinks so. When asked about the 2010 3-D remake of Piranha in a recent interview with Vanity Fair, the famous filmmaker (who briefly worked on the original Piranha II: The Spawning) lamented, “I tend almost never to throw other films under the bus, but that is exactly an example of what we should not be doing in 3-D. Because it just cheapens the medium and reminds you of the bad 3-D horror films from the 70s and 80s, like Friday the 13th 3-D. When movies got to the bottom of the barrel of their creativity and at the last gasp of their financial lifespan, they did a 3-D version to get the last few drops of blood out of the turnip.”

Well, ignoring the fact that I personally  had a lot more fun at the premier of Friday the 13th 3-D back in the day than I did recently watching Avatar (which, to be fair, I did not see in 3-D), Cameron does have a point. The majority of uses of 3-D over the years really have been little more than a gimmick to get people into theater seats through the promise of a movie watching experience which can’t be duplicated at home. Unfortunately, the gimmick has rarely been backed up by quality of content. One need only to browse some of the titles of 3-D releases to realize the truth of this. For every legitimate 3-D classic like the Creature from the Black Lagoon or the 1953 version of House of Wax, there have been untold oodles of movies which no gimmick could save, flicks like A*P*E, Cat-Women of the Moon, and Robot Monster. (Hmm, can’t believe I haven’t done anything with Cat-Women of the Moon on this blog yet.)

Alas, gimmicks only get you so far. Just ask those preachers who over the past decade or so have tried to fill the pews by doing stuff like putting Starbucks inside their churches, holding Oprah-like big prize giveaways, and even sponsoring events such as Bring Your Gun To Church Day (not that we’re against pistol packin’ pastors here in the South, we just question the wisdom of encouraging a heavily armed congregation when there’s always a chance the holy spirit might decide to inspire a forty-minute homily). The problem with such “attractional” ministries is that they pander to the whole church as a commodity mentality and are forced to keep coming up with new and more exciting gimmicks to keep the crowds coming in. And that’s ultimately not going to be effective in the long haul. Brett McCracken, author of Hipster Christianity: When Church and Cool Collide, believes that “If the evangelical Christian leadership thinks that 'cool' Christianity is a sustainable path forward, they are severely mistaken… As a twenty-something, I can say with confidence that when it comes to church, we don't want cool as much as we want real. If we are interested in Christianity in any sort of serious way, it is not because it's easy or trendy or popular - it's because Jesus himself is appealing, and what he says rings true.”

Fortunately, there’s a way to have both. You can have an experience at church that is both singularly unique and utterly meaningful. Plus it’s got a 2,000 year track record, so you know it’s not just some passing fad. What is this miraculous thing, you ask? Well, according to the Catechism, “the inexhaustible richness of this sacrament is expressed in the different names we give it. Each name evokes certain aspects of it. It is called: Eucharist, because it is an action of thanksgiving to God… The Lord's Supper, because of its connection with the supper which the Lord took with his disciples on the eve of his Passion and because it anticipates the wedding feast of the Lamb in the heavenly Jerusalem. The Breaking of Bread, because Jesus used this rite, part of a Jewish meal, when as master of the table he blessed and distributed the bread, above all at the Last Supper… The Eucharistic assembly (synaxis), because the Eucharist is celebrated amid the assembly of the faithful, the visible expression of the Church. The memorial of the Lord's Passion and Resurrection. The Holy Sacrifice, because it makes present the one sacrifice of Christ the Savior and includes the Church's offering… The Holy and Divine Liturgy, because the Church's whole liturgy finds its center and most intense expression in the celebration of this sacrament; in the same sense we also call its celebration the Sacred Mysteries… Holy Communion, because by this sacrament we unite ourselves to Christ, who makes us sharers in his Body and Blood to form a single body. We also call it: the holy things (ta hagia; sancta) - the first meaning of the phrase "communion of saints" in the Apostles' Creed - the bread of angels, bread from heaven, medicine of immortality, viaticum… Holy Mass (Missa), because the liturgy in which the mystery of salvation is accomplished concludes with the sending forth (missio) of the faithful, so that they may fulfill God's will in their daily lives.”

The body and blood of Jesus Christ. Now showing at a parish near you, today and forever after until Jesus himself shows up to lock the doors and turn off the lights. 3-D glasses not required; clear conscience and contrite heart highly recommended.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

COMING ATTRACTIONS: 4D MAN

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Our next upcoming mega-review is the excellent, yet mostly forgotten, 4D Man from 1959. I think this is the last of the lingering requests out there, so if anybody has a movie they’d like to see me struggle to find some kind of meaning in, now’s the time to toss the title into the hat. I couldn’t find a trailer anywhere for 4D Man, but the following scene pretty much sets up the whole movie and throws in a few bars from the film’s catchy jazz score.

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

BMC MOVIE OF THE WEEK: C.H.U.D.

C.H.U.D. (Chud)
  • C.H.U.D. (Chud)
  • C.H.U.D.
People are disappearing all over the Big Apple. Nobody cares, though, because most of the missing are homeless. But when investigative reporter Murphy (J.C. Quinn) tips off principled photographer George Cooper (John Heard) to a government conspiracy involving the dumping of nuclear waste beneath the streets, Cooper decides to dig a little deeper. Soon he discovers the existence of C.H.U.D.s, or "Cannibalistic Humanoid Underground Dwellers," derelicts who have become grotesque monsters after being exposed to the mountains of hazardous waste. Meanwhile, Captain Bosch (Christopher Curry), a cop whose wife is among the missing, forms an unlikely alliance with the Reverend (Daniel Stern), a leftist soup-kitchen cook who knows the score. Murphy, Cooper, Bosch, and the Reverend soon run up against the stonewalling tactics of Wilson (George Martin), a government toadie. As the titular monsters begin to tire of their underground habitat, the protagonists -- including Cooper's wife, beautiful model Lauren Daniels (Kim Greist) -- face a race against time to defeat not only the C.H.U.D.s, but the government's cover-up. The debut, and only film, from writer Parnell Hall and director Douglas Cheek, C.H.U.D. was followed by 1989's C.H.U.D. 2: Bud the C.H.U.D. Co-stars Stern and Heard would later appear together in the first two Home Alone pictures, while Curry would appear in the third. – AllMovie Guide
35% liked it

R, 1 hr. 30 min.

Director: Douglas Cheek

Released: Sep 14, 1984

DVD: Jan 30, 2001

February 6, 2011: Sunday of the Fifth Week in Ordinary Time (Year A)

“We don’t have to listen to the lunatic ravings of this deranged hippy!” Or at least that’s what the head of the Nuclear Regulatory Agency proclaims when confronted with the evidence of C.H.U.D.s stalking the homeless in the sewers of New York City. But this being another “message” monster movie, you can bet your sweet bippy that you should always listen to the deranged hippy, especially if he’s committed enough to his cause to run his own private one-man soup kitchen. But if you just absolutely don’t want to listen to the hippy, then at least lend an ear to his pal, the impassioned photographer who exhibits images of the homeless in order to raise awareness. And if you can’t bear to listen to him either, then maybe you’ll pay attention to their friend, the only cop who gives a damn in all of the Big Apple. Of course, the cop only started caring about all of the missing street people after a C.H.U.D. ate his wife and dog, but still, let’s give credit where credit is due.

That’s right, unlike your standard “message” monster movie, C.H.U.D. gives you not just one, or even two, but three, count’em three, crusaders for your viewing pleasure! Okay, four of you count the earnest journalist, but he’s eaten by C.H.U.D.s pretty quick, so I think we can safely leave him out. But even with only three guys running around crying out for justice, that’s a heckuva lot of screen time given over to pontificating talking heads. And that’s usually the main criticism you’ll find leveled at C.H.U.D., not that it’s bad, but just that it could use a bit more, well… C.H.U.D.

But other than that, C.H.U.D. is a pretty nifty piece of B-movie making. The acting is above average for this sort of thing (Daniel Stern actually makes for a pretty good deranged hippy when all is said and done), the look of the film is slick and polished (NYC is perfectly portrayed in all its pre-cleanup grimy glory), and the C.H.U.D.s, during the few times they actually show their twisted slime-covered faces, are fairly decent rubber suit creations (okay, so a monster with glowing eyes would be functionally blind, but who cares, they still look cool). And you know what, at the end of the day, the “message” that the homeless are not something we should ignore isn’t really all that bad of one to have to listen to.

In fact, it’s pretty much the same message we get in this week’s first reading from the book of Isaiah, “Thus says the LORD: Share your bread with the hungry, shelter the oppressed and the homeless; clothe the naked when you see them, and do not turn your back on your own.” That’s about as fairly a straight forward Old Testament declaration of the corporal works of mercy, which the Catechism tells us “consist especially in feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, clothing the naked, visiting the sick and imprisoned, and burying the dead.”, as you’re going to find. Reflecting on a similar passage in James 2:14-17, Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted considers the practical importance of engaging in such activities. “At some periods in history, the corporal works of mercy have been seen as less important than the spiritual ones because they focus primarily on our material and physical needs, as opposed to those that are spiritual. It is obvious that St. Matthew and St. James would strongly argue against this exclusion of material needs. In fact, the bodily needs of others are perceived more readily than the spiritual. Any loving response to persons with these needs will inevitably lead to a concern for the whole person and to the practice of spiritual works of mercy as well.” And as the reading from Isaiah states, there are some blessings to be gained from engaging in service to others: “Then your light shall break forth like the dawn, and your wound shall quickly be healed; your vindication shall go before you, and the glory of the LORD shall be your rear guard.”

But if there are spiritual benefits to be gained from carrying out the corporal works of mercy, doesn’t this kind of imply there might be personal consequences to not performing them? Well, according to C.H.U.D. there is! And even though we can probably rule out the possibility of man-eating radioactive mutants as a repercussion (at least 98 to 99 percent of the time anyway), the movie is correct. As Bishop Jorge Luis Lona notes, “The rejection of God is not only conveyed by our evil actions, but also by sins of omission, which always suppress the good works we were called to do. What counts are the spiritual and corporal works of mercy.  It’s not only giving; it’s giving of ourselves. Giving for the good of the body and soul of one who is in need.” So while it’s true we can never work our way into Heaven (calm down, protestants), by ignoring the corporal works of mercy, it’s quite possible we could be earning ourselves a spot in the other place.

Saturday, February 05, 2011

JAWS: THE SHARKSPLOITATION EDIT

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THE TAGLINE

“The terrifying motion picture from the terrifying No. 1 best seller.”

THE PLOT

Well, it’s Jaws. Who hasn’t seen Jaws? Really? Oh, alright. The small New England community of Amity Island is set upon by a very large great white shark who has inexplicably chosen their beaches as his feeding ground. The local mayor, concerned about the disastrous effect this could have on the much needed tourist season, is reluctant to admit there’s a problem despite the growing amount of gory evidence. It’s only after the very public death of a small boy that he finally authorizes the local sheriff to hire an expert shark catcher. Armed with both old school fishing tackle and the latest in diving equipment, the sheriff and the fisherman, along with a concerned oceanographer, set sail to to track and kill the beast. Much to their chagrin, however, the trio soon find that they are up against no ordinary shark, and they just might need a bigger boat.

THE POINT

Have you ever walked out of a movie and thought to yourself, “That would have been great if only they [insert your complaint here]?” Well, that’s the whole purpose of a fanedit, to try and change a movie so that it fixes [insert your complaint here]. To be a little more concise, a fanedit is “a fan-made alternative version of an existing film, created by the insertion, deletion or re-ordering of scenes within the movie.” It can also include things like changing the soundtrack, manipulating dialog, and/or digitally altering scenes. For example, you say you’d like to see Batman & Robin without all those vinyl covered butt and crotch shots? Well, there’s a fanedit for that. Or maybe you’d like to watch a version of the Matrix sequels that isn’t all incoherent and sucky? There’s a few fanedits for that. Or how about The Phantom Menace with as little Jar Jar in it as humanly possible? I’ve lost count of how many fanedits there are for that.

Basically, fanedits are intended to make good movies a little better and bad movies a bit more watchable. Which raises an obvious question, why even bother with a fanedit of Jaws? I mean, it’s Jaws for crying out loud. You know, 8.3 out of 10 on IMDb, 100% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, #48 on the AFI’s list of greatest movies of all time (#2 on it’s list of greatest thrillers), THAT Jaws. Why tamper with what most people see as a nearly perfect movie to begin with? Well, to answer that, you’d have to ask the creator of Jaws: The Sharksploitation Edit, a nice fellow who goes by the nomenclature of The Man Behind The Mask (Where do people get these silly Internet names?). According to him, the whole point was “to give JAWS a kind of grindhouse feel and make the movie fun to watch for those who are not afraid to see this masterpiece being turned into something else (but it’s still JAWS, I did not turn the plot upside down). But most of all I did it for my own enjoyment. I hope it’ll work for you.”

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Well, I gotta say, it worked for me. And for a lot of other people as well, winning not only the “Best True Fanedit In June 2009″ award with a 100% undisputed vote, but also the “Best True Fanedit of the year 2009” period. Why all the acclaim for what is basically a chopped up version of Jaws, you ask? Well, what Jaws: The Sharksploitation Edit does so well is not to try and improve Jaws (for that would only invite wrath), but to change it stylistically so it becomes more like one of the countless Jaws rip-offs which flooded drive-in screens during the 1970s and 80s. As you might remember us discussing, those so-called “sharksploitation” movies could never match Jaws in quality (didn’t even try really), so instead they enticed moviegoers into buying tickets by ramping up the exploitative elements, doing stuff like increasing the amount of bloody shark attacks, decreasing the amount of clothing worn by the actors, and throwing in arbitrary subplots requiring lots of guns and explosives. Jaws: The Sharksploitation Edit is a love letter to those kinds of movies, the ones you’d never vote to put on any AFI list, but ones you’d more than happily sit through anyway with a bucket of buttered popcorn and a barrel sized cola.

The way The Man Behind The Mask transforms the original Jaws into a bonafide sharksploitation film is by trimming over 40 minutes from the original movie (you know, all that boring stuff like character development) and adding in almost 30 minutes of new material gleaned from various sources including the Jaws DVD bonus material, shark and naval documentaries, and scenes nabbed from other movies. It’s an undertaking that could easily have ended up being a hatchet job, but thanks to some excellent editing and a meticulous attention to detail, Jaws: The Sharksploitation Edit is one of the best, most seamless fanedits you’ll ever see. And more importantly than the technical aspects, it accomplishes exactly what it set out to do, turning an American classic into something that is still recognizably Jaws, but a Jaws which can sit comfortably on the shelf alongside your prized copies of Orca, Barracuda, and Piranha.

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Now if you’re enough of a movie nut to track down fanedits to begin with, then I certainly don’t want to give away too many of the surprises to be found in Jaws: The Sharksploitation Edit before you see it. Instead, I’ll just touch on a couple of the more obvious things one would expect to find in order to give you a feel of just how the movie was altered. For instance, there’s quite a bit more shark action going on. What was a false alarm in the original Jaws becomes in the fanedit a ridiculous exercise in overkill as a good half dozen of the most ludicrous shark attacks from other movies are edited in to create a veritable surf and turf smorgasbord for Bruce. Things are ramped up likewise on the human side, as in the part where hunters and fisherman from all around the northeast converge on Amity in hopes of securing the $10,000 bounty placed on the shark. In the original Jaws, the chaos in the harbor is only briefly shown. In the fanedit, it becomes a long drawn out sequence filled with rednecks and rough-housers tearing through the waters with guns ablaze, riddling anything with fins full of holes.

But Jaws: The Sharksploitation Edit has much more going for it than just a bit of added blood and bullets. There are also some excellent musical choices made, including pitch perfect uses of the Beach Boy’s Surfer Girl and Lalo Schifrin's infamous disco Jaws theme (alas, some of the harder rock tunes from the 80s feel out of place). There are also oh so slight edits to individual scenes which completely change their intent (Just what is Sherriff Brody really looking at on the beach that has him so disturbed?). And the new ending, which is set up half way through the film but still comes as a complete surprise, may just have you jumping out of your seat with joy. Or disbelief. Either way, it’s absolutely absurd, but perfectly in tone with the off the wall nonsense one typically finds in sharksploitation movies.

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So all in all, if you’re a fan of bad Jaws rip offs and you get a chance to see Jaws: the Sharksploitation Edit, then go for it, you won’t be disappointed. But if you’re wanting the real Jaws, then stay far, far away, because this ain’t it. And therein lies the rub of fanedits when you get down to it. Since they are entirely dependent on the editor’s personal opinion of what works and what doesn’t, viewers are only going to find the new edit successful if their tastes line up with that of the editor’s. In the case of Jaws: The Sharksploitation Edit, even diehard fans of the original had enough of an appreciation of drive-in aesthetics to make the new version an award winner. Unfortunately, some fanedits are just too specific to find a wide audience. Take the No Respect edit of Caddyshack, for example, wherein an editor with an irrational loathing of Rodney Dangerfield excised most of the comedian’s scenes from the movie. Voting on that particular edit was, to say the least, a bit harsh. And then there are fanedits in which you understand the editor’s intentions, but you find them sorely misguided anyway, like with Thomas Jefferson’s recut of the Bible…

What’s that? You say you didn’t know the principal author of the Declaration of Independence was into fanediting? Oh, you better believe it. Smack dab in the middle of his presidency (you would think helping found a new country would have been enough to keep a person’s mind occupied), Thomas Jefferson hit upon the idea of producing his own version of the New Testament. In a letter to John Adams he explained that he was going to rescue the Philosophy of Jesus and the "pure principles which he taught," from the "artificial vestments in which they have been muffled by priests, who have travestied them into various forms as instruments of riches and power for themselves." He finally got around to the project in 1820. Using scissors and paste Jefferson clipped out and assembled texts from the Gospels, keeping what he believed to be authentic and leaving out what he thought were later additions and corruptions. Among those things Jefferson rejected were any reference to the Divinity of Christ, Baptism, and the Eucharist, and all mentions of miracles. What Jefferson claimed to have kept were "the very words only of Jesus," where one would find "the most sublime and benevolent code of morals which has ever been offered to man." It was an interesting experiment, but as you might expect, the end result was radically different from the Gospels as they had been known for centuries. Flipping through the Jefferson Bible, you won’t find a Jesus who acknowledges too many things supernatural, but you will find one who promotes democratic ideals and service to his fellow countrymen. In other words, Thomas Jefferson’s Jesus sounds an awful lot like Thomas Jefferson. And while there’s certainly a lot to admire about our third president, methinks he knocked up one too many of his slaves to qualify as the messiah.

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Now, Jefferson’s slicing and dicing of the New Testament wasn’t really a new thing (Martin Luther tried unsuccessfully to fanedit out the books of James and Revelation), but is was indicative of the errors which were slowly creeping into modern theology through the abuse of the historical-critical method of biblical studies. And “abuse” is the correct term here, as there’s nothing inherently wrong with the historical-critical method itself. In fact, the Catechism explicitly promotes this kind of bible study when it states that “in order to discover the sacred authors' intention, the reader must take into account the conditions of their time and culture, the literary genres in use at that time, and the modes of feeling, speaking and narrating then current. For the fact is that truth is differently presented and expressed in the various types of historical writing, in prophetical and poetical texts, and in other forms of literary expression.”

But as Jefferson’s misguided fanedit shows, things can go wrong with the historical-critical method, a fact which has become unavoidably noticeable since the advent of electronic mass media in the 20th century. If you don’t believe me, just try and turn on the Discovery or History Channels around Easter and Christmas. Do so and you’ll find the airwaves littered with crock-umentaries full of so-called experts (usually folks like ex-priest John Dominic Crossan or one of his Jesus Seminar cronies) offering up their pet theories on the history of the Church, who the “real” Jesus was, and what his words really meant. The problem, as Pope Benedict XVI notes in his book Jesus of Nazareth, is that “if you read a number of these reconstructions one after the other, you see at once that far from uncovering an icon that has become obscured over time, they are much like photographs of their authors and the ideals they hold.” So just as Jefferson produced a Jesus who would have called for revolution against England, so do the un-intelligentsia of the televised history of religion provide us with a Jesus who might actually have been the illegitimate son of a Roman soldier who raped Mary (because atheists know that whole Incarnation thing can never be scientifically verified, so it must be a lie), a Mary Magdalene who might actually have been an apostle who got the boot after Jesus died (because feminists KNOW the Church has always hated women), and even a speculative CSI-style reconstruction of the face of Jesus complete with short curly hair (because, screw the Shroud of Turin, EVERYBODY knows all those old depictions of Jesus were just attempts by Europeans to impose a white aesthetic on minorities). These experts have no actual proof to back up any of these assertions, but they can sure make a theory sound legitimate if enough of them repeat it ad nauseam.

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You see, the truth isn’t really served when the goal of the person interpreting history is to promote a predetermined personal agenda. “The historical-critical method – specifically because of the intrinsic nature of theology and faith – is and remains an indispensable dimension of exegetical work.” explains Pope Benedict XVI, “For it is the very essence of biblical faith to be about real historical events… [But] if we push this history aside, Christian faith as such disappears and is recast as some other religion… what can faith in Jesus as the Christ possibly mean, in Jesus as the Son of the living God, if the man Jesus was so completely different from the picture that the Evangelists painted of him and that the Church, on the evidence of the Gospels, takes as the basis of her preaching?… All these attempts have produced a common result: the impression that we have very little certain knowledge of Jesus and that only at a later stage did faith in his divinity shape the image we have of him… This is a dramatic situation for faith, because its point of reference is being placed in doubt: Intimate friendship with Jesus, on which everything depends, is in danger of clutching at thin air.” That’s why, as another Lent and Easter season rapidly approaches, we must always take care to be discerning of the true intentions of the “experts” that television will be trotting out for their annual specials. Fanedits are perfectly fine in the world of movies because, let’s face it, no one’s soul is in mortal danger if someone decides to pull the old MISSING REEL gag in the middle of Jaws. But messing with true biblical history, even for reasons you consider noble, that can have eternal consequences for everyone involved.

THE STINGER

In the documentary American Grindhouse, famed director John Landis proclaims Mel Gibson’s The Passion of The Christ as the best exploitation movie he’s seen in decades, mainly due to the sustained level of bloody violence the movie depicts. While I think there’s a bit of truth in that statement, I also think Gibson’s intent wasn’t solely to titillate as so many exploitation movies do, but also to depict visually the internal agony Christ endured by taking on the sins of the world. Still, I’m pretty sure that was more than 39 lashes we saw Christ receive in The Passion of The Christ. It’s always a good idea to remember that all biblical movies, even the ones we like, are fanedits of scripture to a certain degree.

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

SHORT FEATURE: SEALAB 2021–UH OH

Well, it’s seems to be pretty cold all around the States these days, but at least here at The B-Movie Catechism we’re still hanging out about the beaches. And by about, I mean miles offshore and thousands of leagues down with the crew of Sealab 2021. But whatever works, right?

Uh Oh! Did somebody commit a sin here? I mean, besides the guy with the hooker? Well, according to the New Catholic Encyclopedia of 1967, “theologians make a different distinction… between statements that reveal damaging truths about another unnecessarily and those that are deliberate lies. The former is called detraction, the latter is called calumny. Hence, detraction is the blackening of an absent person's good name by unnecessarily revealing a true but hidden crime, sin, or defect. "Blackening" is used to express the effect of detraction, namely, dulling or obscuring the luster of a good name. Scripture points out that a good name "… is more desirable than great riches" Blackening another's good name is more than an uncharitable act; it is a sin of injustice. That the detracting statements are true is not a justification for their being made. The hidden truth about another that would damage his reputation may not be revealed without necessity.” So it looks like we have a clear case of detraction going on here.

“Many Catholics seem to be unaware of the fact that detraction is also a sin” writes Fr. Kenneth Baker, S.J. of the Catholic Education Resource Center, “a sin contrary to the Eighth Commandment. The seriousness of the sin, in the case of both calumny and detraction, depends upon the gravity of the injury done to the other party. The sin can be either venial or mortal, depending on the circumstances… It follows then, since both calumny and detraction are violations of justice, that both demand some kind of restitution. A person who has lied about another can often right the wrong he has done by retracting the lie and stating the truth. In the case of detraction the situation is more difficult, since it is not a matter of lying but of revealing the hidden sins or faults of another that should not be revealed in these circumstances. Frequently little can be done in the practical order. One cannot deny the statements since they actually are true; to deny them would be to add a lie to the previous detraction. Some moralists recommend, in this situation, apologies and praise of the person's good points.”

Yeah, that’s right. We’re expected to actually apologize. Uh oh.