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It's become a truism that Christians get the short
end of the cultural stick on our multiplex screens. Future
archaeologists, looking back at our culture through the lens of our
movies, would conclude that Christianity was some sort of judgemental,
repressive religious sect whose adherents (and leadership) consisted
primarily of liars, thieves, megalomaniacs, sex abusers and violent,
deranged killers.
This galls me. I've been a
Christian for going on thirty years, and in that time I've met a whole
lot of other Christians. Granted, I've come across a reasonable share
of hypocritical or emotionally troubled believers no surprise there,
since this is one club that'll take anybody as a member. (Indeed, our
founder kind of preferred sinners, so we come by this honestly.) Still,
for all that, the vast majority of Christians I've gotten to know are
pretty darn decent nary an axe-murderer among them. By and large,
they're just plain folks, most of whom are pretty sure they're not
perfect, and by and large are committed to at least trying to do right
by other people. It's like it's part of their religion, or something.
Even so, at the movies you can
pretty much count on any character who's identified as being a Christian
to be either seriously messed up or someone you're not meant to take
seriously.
Or can you? A decade and a half
ago, I would have said that without hesitation. But the fact is, I
can't be quite so glib about that now. See, I've started to notice
something.
I go to a lot of movies. And as
the years go by, it seems to me there are less and less occasions when I
leave the theatre feeling slandered. And more and more, I come up with
movies that include Christian characters who are recognizable to me:
relatively positive, often pretty nuanced portrayals of, well, real
human beings.
The first on my list is a
character who, oddly enough, others don't even seem to consider a
Christian Billy Kwan, brilliantly portrayed by Linda Hunt in The
Year Of Living Dangerously, a marginal character whose preoccupation
with the crowd's question to John The Baptist ("What then must we do?")
leads to his quiet sacrificial support of an impoverished woman and her
child, his efforts to awaken the Mel Gibson character to the spiritual
realities which cast their shadows on the material world like characters
in a Javanese wayang puppet play, and his final choice to take action in
the face of political turmoil during the Suharto coup. Excluded from
privilege because of his dwarfism and mixed race, he lives an examined
life, treasuring friendships to the point of obsession or are the
files he keeps an act of oblation, something closer to divine love? A
man of obedience, of conscience, spiritually quickened - one of "the
least" who, in the upside-down Kingdom of God, is counted greatest.
My mind also turns to another
character whose faith is often overlooked, brought to the fore by Brooke
Smith's stunning performance of Sonya in Vanya On 42nd
Street. It seems every other director of Chekhov's "Uncle Vanya"
treats this character's Christianity with anything from irony to
contempt, dismissing it (and the character) as sadly naive and
ineffectual. But director Andre Gregory, whose work is preoccupied with
spiritual exploration (My Dinner With Andre), gives full weight
to this young woman's beliefs and the integrity of her life, in clear
contrast to the lives of indulgence and ennui around her and in so
doing, finds a fresh power and emotional centre in the play that lifts
it above the oppressive pessimism which usually permeates. There is a
simple quality of goodness, a directness and lack of jadedness or
artifice which rings through in this actress's embodiment of the
character and makes her final scene about the value of work and the hope
of heaven deeply moving and memorable.
When Flashdance appeared
in theatres in the mid-Eighties, it was condescended to by critics as a
shallow wish-fulfillment story in a way that didn't account for the
film's power, not only at the box office but also in my own experience
as an oh-so-sophisticated theatre student. But an NPR commentator put
the film in perspective for me: he commented that if he'd seen this film
as a teenager, it would undoubtedly been The Film of his life a
defining, inspiring, art-affirming, body-affirming story that would
provide a compelling myth for his emergence into adulthood. I mention
this not to claim that Jennifer Beals's character was somehow a believer
(though I do seem to remember a visit to a church, and a Catholic
grandmother, that seemed to suggest certain themes of vocation?), but
rather to suggest that we can discover the virtues of a film we might
otherwise dismiss by looking at it through the right set of eyes more
exactly, through eyes of the right age. I was blessed to sit with my
sixteen-year-old daughter to watch what was then her favourite film
one which I probably never would have seen otherwise, knowing in advance
it must be nothing but a sentimental romance, A Walk To Remember.
But sharing in my teenager's exhilaration about this story, seeing it
through her eyes, I got to see the movie from the right vantage point.
Mandy Moore plays a bright, self-possessed high school girl completely
unconcerned with the preoccupations of other girls her age, appearance
and popularity. Instead, she is living life on her own terms, working
through a checklist of experiences she is determined to have before she
dies. She is unapologetic about her life, about herself, and indeed
about her Christian faith: and the constrained, anxious lives of those
around her are weighed and found wanting when contrasted to hers. The
judgement is not hers as no-nonsense as this character is about
character, consequence and betrayal of trust, she is not judgemental.
She's got her life to live, and nothing keeps her from it. Roger Ebert
shared my unabashed enthusiasm for this movie, and this character;
"She's a smart, nice girl, a reminder that one of the pleasures of the
movies is to meet good people." While it's easy to dismiss this movie
as sentimental, this character as "too good to be true," I have to
wonder didn't you know anybody like this in high school?
Preternaturally self-possessed, full of grace and optimism, and quite
probably a Christian? I did. They inspired me. And it was a gift to
see such a person on the big screen, thirty years later, and to be
inspired all over again.
This film, interestingly, also
included "the other kind" of Christian character the young woman's
father, a standard-issue pastor/dad, harshly controlling and
mistrustful. Fair enough, the guy has his reasons for being that way,
and there are basic dramaturgical reasons why he was probably drawn that
way, but Peter Coyote's performance played as one- or two-note
caricature to me, pulled from the same bag of cliches as so many other
ministerial monster parents my mind turns immediately to the
dance-o-phobic Reverend Shaw Moore in that other mid-Eighties teen
flick, Footloose.
There are a lot of reasons why
Magnolia has a particular appeal to Christians, but one of the
most significant for me was John C. Reilly's clichι-defying embodiment
of an almost comically idealistic, inexperienced, unsure, naive,
compassionate cop this guy is part of the same police force as that
dude in Training Day? The first time we see him, he is at the
wheel of his squad car carrying on an animated conversation with someone
we don't see who turns out in fact to be Someone Unseen, God Himself.
The attraction-of-opposites romance that plays out between this naive,
praying policeman and the strung out junky-in-need-of-redemption he
meets on a routine noise disturbance call is not only hilarious but
touching, and never does the film condescend to this endearing man or
his faith.
For many Christians,
Babette's Feast is the quintessential "Christian-positive" film, a
celebration of the via positiva over a soul-destroying,
relationship-withering strain of asensual pietism. I find it ironic
(and significant) that non-Christians read this film very differently,
seeing in it the triumph of good old hedonism over life-denying
Christianity. The former view Babette, with her artist's affirmation of
the senses and communal celebration, as inherently Christian, making
much of the subtle suggestions that the character is a Catholic
believer: the latter simply assume that nothing this luxurious and tasty
could ever come out of our rule-bound, heavenly-minded religion, and
identify Babette as One Of Their Own. Are the strict, ascetic
townspeople caricatures of pietistic Christians? I don't think so
there's something about the climate, the landscape, and the history of
these Northern believers that can too readily shrink and harden a soul,
and to my eyes this is a pretty apt picture. Is Babette the embodiment
of God's response to His own creation, the ringing great "Behold, it is
good!" of the Genesis creation account? I think so but I don't know
if Isak Dinesen would see it that way or not.
There are other remarkable,
truthful portrayals of Christians in film that come to mind. One of my
absolute Meryl Streep roles, a wonderful just-plain-folks contrast to
her many thoroughbred aristocrats, the grieving Seventh Day Adventist
mother in the heart-rending Australian story A Cry In The Dark.
Then there's Mac Sledge, Robert Duvall's masterpiece of understatement,
the country singer in Tender Mercies who fights to recover his
life and dignity after hitting an ugly, alcoholic bottom in an
anything-but-God-forsaken motel in the flat heart of Texas and indeed
the woman of quiet faith who plays the central role in his potential
redemption, a gorgeous exercise in simplicity by Tess Harper. Is
Carrie Watts, the central character in screenwriter Horton Foote's other
mid-Eighties masterpiece Trip To Bountiful, a Christian? Is her
journey home, sloughing off the scales of petty bickering and
bitterness, also a journey back to a clean and pure childhood faith, as
we sense not only from the movie's title but also by the glorious
rendition of "Softly And Tenderly" which plays over the closing
credits? And then there's the O'Connor-esque "Sonny" Dewey, another
Duvall creation, that deeply flawed southern preacher whose God-haunted
story illustrates another Apostle's assertion that "the gifts and
calling of God are without repentance" and that grace abounds, even to
the chief of sinners.
Which puts me in mind of several
other professional Christians whose movie representations are something
other than caricature. It seems to me that the early Eighties saw a
cultural shift which meant that there began to be authentic Christians
showing up here and there in films, after decades of believers who were
either avuncular priests and well-intentioned nuns or else lying,
thieving, fornicating, violent, abusive Believers (of both True and
false varieties) many of them pastors or evangelists, none of them
recognizable among the thousands of Christians I have known in a
lifetime of knowing Christians. But recent years have given us any
number of sympathetic characters with real humanity who are also people
of faith even ministers of one kind or another! Wonders never cease.
The lonely, grieving Lutheran pastor in Italian For Beginners;
the compassionate, somewhat unpredictable, doing-the-best-he-can
clergyman in You Can Count On Me; the extraordinary Sister Helen
Prejean in Dead Man Walking; Ed Harris's broken-faithed priest in
The Third Miracle; both Jeremy Irons and Robert DeNiro in The
Mission, men of faith who must agonize over the question whether or
not to live by the sword. Rather less successful (but still not
condescending) were Mel Gibson's faith-frozen Episcopal (or was he
Catholic? or did the director even know?) priest in Signs, who
seemed more a cluster of screenwriterly character traits than a
fully-realized human soul, or Edward Norton's "I'll take the love of
Jenna Elfman over the love of God any day" hip and trendy priest in
Keeping The Faith. (Actually, I'm being glib in this last case: the
movie did a pretty good job of portraying the struggles of a man whose
vow of celibacy is called into question when he finds himself falling in
love with an undeniably adorable no-longer-childhood friend. And it was
particularly strong in the scenes with Milos Forman playing the older
counsellor-priest: these sections wrestled through these very real
questions with an authenticity that was astonishing in the very same
movie that turned an utterly tone-deaf ear to the inappropriateness of a
certain rabbi's sexual escapades.)
There's been a batch of European
films, lately, that give immense respect to the Christians at the heart
of their story, including the droll Finnish comedy The Man Without A
Past and a touchingly beautiful, quirkily comic Italian film Not
Of This World, which deals searchingly with questions of faith,
vocation and love. Even blockbustery comic-derived fare like X2:
X-Men United and Daredevil seems willing to include Christian
faith as a legitimate character attribute.
If there was a movie that
heralded the change from stereotype and condescension to at least
occasional respect and recognizeability, it was the 1981 hit Chariots
Of Fire, where audiences rooted for an unabashedly evangelical
Christian, even cheering him on as he took a moral stand they would
never themselves consider somehow, by some cinematic alchemy, Your
Average Theatregoer perceived Eric Lidell to be a hero for refusing to
run an Olympic race on the Lord's Day, and believing Christians sitting
in those crowded movie houses, braced for the usual mockery of
conservative Christian practices, experienced an intoxicating thrill as
their values and standards were celebrated instead. Though it must be
said that historical figures had long been allowed to be both Christian
and honourable it was acceptable for Richard Burton to defend the
honour of God in the 1964 filmization of Jean Anouilh's Becket,
or for Paul Scofield to take a similar stand two years later when Robert
Bolt's A Man For All Seasons hit the silver screen, for example.
Still, when the Chariots rolled it had been a decade and a half since
Christians had been allowed to be Good Guys, and we were only protected
from the Sprinting Scotsman and his gospel faith by decades rather than
centuries it was electric to hear this man tell his missionary sister
(in what must surely be the line of dialogue most-quoted among Christian
artists of a certain generation), "God made me for China. But He also
made me fast. And when I run, I feel His pleasure." The runner's
pleasure in the God who made him? Yes. The Creator's pleasure in His
child, and in the gift being expressed? Yes.
Other historical stories have
been graced by masterful screen interpretations. Hard on the heels of
definitive performances as Hannibal Lecter and the butler Stevens (in
Remains Of The Day), Antony Hopkins gave us a memorable Jack Lewis
in Shadowlands. Opposite Hopkins' Dr Treves in The Elephant
Man, John Hurt was astonishing as John Merrick can you believe he
did that WITHOUT MAKE-UP?! and while the character's Christianity
wasn't the main theme of David Lynch's powerful black and white
evocation of industrial 19th century London, it played out in
pivotal events and metaphors, as Merrick's humanity and artistic soul is
revealed through his private, prayerful recitation of the 23rd
Psalm or his painstaking construction of a model of Saint Paul's
cathedral. Other notable portrayals of historical Christians include
Zeffirelli's Brother Sun, Sister Moon (a
Saint-Francis-as-proto-hippy 1972 flick which gives the lie to my
Chariots Of Fire theory oh well...), and a curiously restrained
portrayal of soon-to-be-sainted Father Damien in Paul Cox's 1999
Molokai David Wenham's gentle, patient, stolid characterization
seems at odds with the historical accounts of the fiery Belgian priest
whose passion and pig-headedness put him in constant conflict with
pretty much everyone he came in contact with, but it does embody a
wonderful stubborn undeterability, and a compassion which was certainly
at the core of this remarkable man of faith.
This survey wouldn't be complete
without mention of three other significant (but less-than-ideal)
Christian characters. George C. Scott's portrayal of a "Hardcore"
Dutch Calvinist evokes memories of John Ford's archetypal "searcher,"
probing the darkest recesses of hell (which is to say, the wild west
coast pornography industry) for his daughter in a performance that is as
unsympathetic as it is indelibly memorable: when a spiritually lost
young hooker, aiding him in his search, expresses curiousity about his
religious beliefs, Jake Van Dorn trots out his catechismal "TULIP"
formula (Total Depravity, Unconditional Election, Limited Atonement...),
and she responds "You're more fucked up than I am." And we can only
agree particularly as we sit numbly and watch the unfolding of the
film's final scenes, and see a man gain his daughter but lose his soul.
This character study is not unrealistic writer/director Paul Schrader
knows the worlds he describes, as evidenced by the deadly accurate (and
funny, and sadly oppressive) opening sequence in the Van Dorn home in
Grand Rapids at Christmas but it is harsh and unsympathetic,
fulfilling our culture's stereotypical expectations about the inhumanity
of the fundamentalist conservative believer.
Another clearly Christian
character portrayed in a less-than-flattering light is the young and
untested Bob in the Kevin Spacey Danny Devito vehicle, The Big
Kahuna. Peter Facinelli admirably holds his own in this
heavy-weight cast, playing the thankless role of a naive young
fundamentalist whose decision to place his calling to preach the gospel
above his assignment to sell industrial lubricants earns him the
contempt not only of the other two characters but also the playwright,
and thence the audience. For many viewers, whether Christian or not,
this character embodies all that is wrong-headed and offensive about
Christian efforts at "witnessing." But I found this portrayal one-sided
and misleading. We are set up to perceive DeVito's character as the
wise, caring and truly spiritual one, seasoned by the mundane and
all-but-inescapable suffering, shame and quiet desperation that seem
almost inevitable by-products of so many ordinary lives: divorce and
alienation, disillusionment and just plain tiredness. And this
character, given moral weight and authority not only by the fact of his
experience of suffering and relative compassion, but also by a
magnificently centred DeVito performance, prounounces Bob's evangelistic
efforts meaningless, his face and soul "characterless," his burgeoning
friendship with Dick Fuller (the "big kahuna" himself) manipulative and
empty simply because the young man talked with him about Jesus, and then
found himself reluctant to push his company's product for fear it would
cheapen a personal and spiritual conversation. Clearly, we are expected
to "buy" the older salesman's perception of the situation: we nod in
knowing agreement when Phil corrects Bob for his hypocrisy; "If you
really cared about the guy, you'd ask him about his family, about his
life: but as soon as you lay your hands on the conversation to steer it,
you're nothing but a salesman." We conveniently forget as does Phil,
and apparently the playwright that Bob's first (lengthy) conversation
with Fuller came about because the younger man was curious about the
details of his life, such as the man's feelings about the death of any
number of family pets! If Fuller was put off by the young man's
ham-fisted and inappropriate evangelistic zeal, we get no evidence of
that: at the end of that inital conversation, the older man invites Bob
to join him later at a private party to continue their heart to heart
talk. We're expected to accept Phil's judgement of the young Christian
as being shallow, manipulative and insincere, and we walk right down
that garden path: but I wonder what The Big Kahuna himself would have to
say about DeVito's judgement if the playwright had the integrity to give
him some stage time. I think he would have found he had nothing to say
to Phil and Larry, whose only interest was to use him to benefit their
company: and I think the judgement he would render of his
spiritually-minded, listening young friend might be very different from
that of the playwight, the other characters and, ultimately, the
all-too-manipulable audience.
Another gruelling "mean streets"
film with spiritual concerns is Abel Ferrera's almost unwatchable (but I
think profound) 1992 film featuring Harvey Keitel in a quintessential
performance as a Bad Lieutenant on the NYPD. A vice cop utterly
addicted to cocaine and violence and power, this
lapsed-as-can-be-imagined Catholic is "snatched as a brand from the
burning" when supernatural visions (or are they the drug-induced
manifestations of a not-quite-seared guilty soul?) follow his
investigation of a nun's vicious rape. Keitel is unflinching in his
embodiment of a man utterly given over to carnality who is nonetheless
pursued by the hound of heaven, snapping relentlessly at his heels.
So. Christians abound, at long
last. Bad Christians, accurately portrayed. Good Christians, badly
portrayed. No surprise there. But what is truly surprising, as well
as deeply gratifying, are all those good Christians, well portrayed.
For every cliched film rendition of an axe-wielding, Bible-quoting
psychopath or a standard issue missionary monster, there's another that
features can you believe! a recognizable human being, whose flaws
are nothing more or less than part of their palpable humanity. Who also
happens to follow Jesus.
Kind of like the Christians I
know. Kind of like me.
*
Ron Reed is the founder and artistic director of Pacific Theatre, a
professional theatre with Christian mandate in Vancouver, British
Columbia. He won the 1997 Chalmers Canadian Play award and has been
nominated for Dora Mavor Moore, Sterling and Jessie Richardson awards
for his playwrighting and acting. A graduate of Regent College and the
California Institute of the Arts, Reed is currently at work on Soul
Food, a book about the movies.
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