Poffy
the sexy saviour
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Jesus:
The Man, The Myth, The Model.
by
Jon Dunmore © 24 Jun 2006.
KING OF KINGS is the definitive Catholic document:
not really religious, not really holy, not really accurate.
Just the way Catholics like it.
This
movie did for Jesus what Richard Burton did for Roman accents.
Being
raised in a Catholic household and inculcated to believe
that my every living act should be aimed at securing a throw-pillow
at the Savior's feet for my invisible, future self, KINGS
was foisted upon me every Easter. Back then, that
was Parental Control. Being unaware of any other methods
of madness, I ate it up like communion wafers and sacramental
wine. (It mattered not that eating the metaphorical Body
and Blood of Christ originated in cannibalism - what young
Catholics didn't know wouldn't hurt them; not like older
Catholics would hurt them were they to defy superstitious
Catholic ritual.)
Now I know better. Jesus was so popular because he was a
looker.
Vindicating
the hard-won fantasies of generations of Catholics who,
against all evidence to the contrary, forcefully promulgated
the visage of a blue-eyed savior who spoke American, director
Nicholas Ray casts a fragile gay supermodel as Messiah -
to Catholics, Jeffrey Hunter IS Jesus. You'd be hard pressed
to convince them otherwise. The shrew-brained capacity of
Catholics was personified in my own father. I will never
forget his outrage as he blared unheeded at some long-forgotten
TV movie which portrayed a decidedly Lebanese, hook-nosed,
jerry-curled Jesus: "That's not what Jesus looked
like!" In most Catholic households, one need only cast
one's gaze to the framed portrait abiding over the living
room, to see what Jesus really looked like: painfully
Caucasian; long, glossy Cindy Crawford tresses and Fabio
cheekbones; perfectly trimmed beard; with heart on outside
of body, surrounded by crown of thorns and light blue eyes
which followed you everywhere.
For
Jeffrey Hunter, it's good to be the King of Kings.
It
would be easy to disparage this movie as a fantasy - but
then, every movie is a fantasy (yes, even those Inspired
By True Events). And as Monty Python once said, "You
can't really make fun of Jesus," because he only said
and did commendable things and delivered a message of social
harmony that people who came after him have twisted to the
shape of their own malformed minds. But - as Python concluded
- "you can make fun of everything else around him."
Therefore, though the Message of this movie is attuned to
human survival - through the altruistic teachings of that
honey, Jeffrey Hunter - the silliness is in the fact that
a demonstrably insane fantasy had to be erected around these
teachings to impart their message (from a virgin giving
birth, to a white Jesus, to corpses being reanimated, and
ultimately burdening the possibly-historical Jesus figure
with the mantle of divine Messiah).
Relying
solely on Hunter's stunning looks, Ray forgets he needs
to move the story forward with "action." Back
when being a "fisher of men" had no homoerotic
overtones, this soft-focus savior meanders dolefully about
the desert with epic music dogging him and his merry men,
all his "miracles" reported in past tense by Roman
centurions, with a momentous, drawn-out Sermon on the Mount
- Jesus-stock AD 33 - where Jesus smacks down The Beatitudes
(That "Blessed are the cheesemakers" speech).
Ray
somehow flenses every iota of action from the film, choral
embellishments perfunctorily reminding us through every
turgid vignette that we're watching something we should
be in awe of. Robert Ryan epitomizes this lack of action
with his torpid John the Baptist, probably kicking himself
when Charlton Heston injected the Baptist with sheer epic
cheesedom in George Stevens's THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD (1965). (But then, who could ever beat out Heston
for sheer epic cheesedom?)
To
retain the film's "family" thrust, nothing outlandishly
graphic is portrayed; even with Jesus's torturing and flaying,
as with any superhot model, nothing seems all that tragic
when his hair still looks that good. And with his 'pits
shaved for maximum boy-band effect, he even makes crucifixion
look kinda sexy.
Habitually
prudish adults and censors suddenly lose all sense of discretion
around Jesus movies, allowing their kids (nay, forcing them)
to watch what should be considered despicable, obscene,
R-rated acts (thorns forced down on a man's head; nailing
living flesh to a crossbeam); claiming that children could
learn from the bigotry displayed by the Romans and Pharisees
in persecuting a man for his beliefs - conveniently sublimating
the fact that it is this same bigotry on their part which
has pummeled the image of a white Jesus into dreamboat dogma.
The
Romans are to Jesus movies what the Russians are to Bond
movies - a shorthand for "evil incarnate." Which
should be ironic to Catholics, as their full title is Roman
Catholics (due to Constantine I legalizing Christianity
in Rome in 313 A.D.). Christians - and Catholics especially
- seem to forget that their particular denomination did
not exist during Jesus's actual time on Earth. It was the
Israelites and Jews - portrayed as always in constant prayer,
unequivocally repentant for whatever insecurities they fed
their children to keep them downtrodden - being terrorized
by those Evil Romans with their manly Sensible Sandals and
sensuous nippled breastplates. Modern Christians ally themselves
with the downtrodden peoples onscreen, never considering
the non-stop wars they have waged on those very peoples,
for the exact same reason as the Romans - challenging their
Messiah's divinity!
There
is a whole subplot involving Barabbas the New Yorker (Harry
Guardino, who just can't shake that Big Apple stanque)
and Judas (Rip Torn), amassing troops and storming temples
- from a section of the Bible no one can seem to find.
Due
to every religion preaching life after death (that most
moronic of oxymorons), screenwriter Philip Yordan need not
even preface Jesus's "resurrection" with any exposition.
Before we know it, the choir is in full swing and Jesus
is back to meandering, now with whiter whites.
There's
a word for people who come back from the dead: zombies.
But
Jesus can't be a zombie - not with those soft-filter lenses
and choral rejoicing; not with those light eyes and high
cheekbones
No one in the film seems particularly horrified
that their friend may have come back to life, and are too
ready to proclaim him "risen" rather than "reanimated."
The "grave-robbing" option is given short shrift,
which speaks volumes about their Denial Factor and also
explains how they deluded themselves into seeing Jesus amongst
them after his death. Nowadays, telling outright lies via
the media is euphemistically called spin. Back then, it
was euphemistically called gospel.
In
his book, Two Masters, One Message (1978), indoctrinated
Christian Roy C. Amore compares Jesus Christ and Gautama
Buddha, struggling to be objective about the Christian theology
he knows has been "borrowed" from Buddhist theology
(which was established in Northern India five hundred years
before Christianity started in Palestine).
Amore's
sobriety breaks down when he describes "miracles"
of the two men: "From time to time nature bends her
rules a bit for the sake of the masters." Into this
"scholarly" account of two major figureheads,
kindergarten magic is irrationally invoked with nary a ripple
in the high-browed attitude! Amore possesses titles like
Associate Professor of Religious Studies (University of
Windsor, Canada), B.A. (Drew University), Ph.D (Columbia
University); he is an editor to numerous publications -
yet can get away with purveying ignorance in the espousal
of magic because he knows that the majority of publishers,
editors and readers are also indoctrinated with this insanity.
Movies
can unquestioningly portray something as outlandish as a
zombie in Western idiom because people like Roy C. Amore
abound - "scholars" who corroborate Christian
idiocy via unverifiable "doctrine." Why does nature never
bend her rules for great leaders who have access to worldwide
media? Why couldn't Mahatma Gandhi cure lepers? Why couldn't
Martin Luther King Jr. reanimate drive-by victims? What
is the reason God is refusing to bring harmony to the Middle
East? (I'm sure he has told George W. Bush in one of their
many chats.)
"I'm
amazed that men like you can be so shallow, thick and slow..."
- Jesus, JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR.
Author
Harlan Ellison outlines five literary character types known
throughout the world, "free-floating universal images"
dogging humanity's consciousness: Tarzan, Superman, Mickey
Mouse, Robin Hood and Sherlock Holmes. The concept of Jesus
- whether he was man or god - was the Superman "type"
long before Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster put Kal-El in cape
and tights. (And yet, Jesus's robes do suffice for a cape
- the symbol of authority, of smooth-flowing power - and
the once-immodest wrap that graven image-makers wrought
on the crucified Christ has over the years come to resemble
the Superhero Panty.) For this reason - not because he was
the Son of God - Jesus will never die; if we are really
lucky, his messages of social harmony will one day be understood.
Not by Catholics or Christians though - if they have not
apprehended the messages after 2000 years, it's obvious
they never will.
Ultimately,
media like KING OF KINGS is dangerous, because people
use religious zeal as if the word "religious"
did not apply; from what I can tell, spreading the word
of Jesus means killing everyone who doesn't agree with you;
tolerance means forcing your views down everyone else's
throat; and loving your enemy means only when they agree
with you - if not, see point number one.
That's
why these same bigots cannot see the selfishness and hypocrisy
inherent in the concept of scoring points on earth for the
sole reason of attaining that throw-pillow at the anointed
feet of Jeffrey Hunter.
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