Bruce, thanks for the links. I read the guardian link and wow, the artistic liberties that the film took in order to produce a movie which they highlight is asinine. Who cares about Jesus stamping on a snake, the fact is, he was scared about what he was about to endure and wanted out but realised what he was about to go through he had to go through,
which is why he existed in the first
place. Gibson shoving Satan into
the scene was a metaphor for
Christ wanting to opt out and call it
quits. The stamping of the snake
was a metaphor for Christ
accepting his fate and ridding
himself of the temptation to opt
out.
As for the chairs and tables thing, I
don't know why Gibson went where he did with it but it's
harmless and light hearted fun
between a
man and his mother, playing
upto Christ's trade skill as a
carpenter. No big deal.
The Jews not being
responsible for Jesus' death
and the catholic church
agree??? Well I guess Jesus
just walked upto the
Romans, said a few "your
momma" jokes and
suggested crucifixion as an
appropriate punishment for such
behaviour. But hey the Catholics
worship and pray to Mary so...(I was raised a catholic,
went to catholic school and all that
but realised the catholic church in some regards is utter...well let's just say I see things differently in some areas.)
I don't understand why this
is a big deal. The Jews and
the particular generation who were
responsible for the persecution of
Christ were dealt with accordingly
(70AD).
As for Christ's torture, Christ was
beaten and disfigured beyond
recognition before he even made it
to the cross so by contrast in reality Gibson held back in this regard, which I'm sure many people would find hard to believe considering what we saw in the film. We can call it torture porn now but back then that sort if brutality was the norm. There were no human rights or geneva conventions. Just straight up hardcore punishment being dished out.
It's weird, being crucified was one of the worst and most severe and humiliating ways to be killed and yet when people read the noble or talk about the crucifixion, they just gloss over it like, "yep and he was put on the cross, bowed his head and died. Moving on..." so many people fail to understand the significance of being killed in such a way and what the whole process entails. But then again we've all seen pictures, crucifixes and movies if Christ's crucifixion where he just about breaks a sweat, a trickle of blood if they want to be "edgy".
At the end of the day the POTC was a film deliberately focusing on the moments leading upto and including Christ's death and resurrection and those moments were horrendously brutal. Wether one is a follower of Christ or not, surely, if one understands or is familiar with why Christ died then does it not stand to reason that his death would incur the most painful type of suffering and humiliation one can go through if he's supposed to die by saving mankind from eternal damnation. If it was as simple as "oh and then Christ died blah blah blah..." then he might as well have not bothered the torture and the crucifixion and settled for a significantly less elaborate death like being shanked by a Roman with his big pointy sword.
I'll look at the other links later.