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  • THE PASSION
    Thursday, February 19

    (from the official website: THE PASSION)



    In Rome, where centuries of human history tumble past in stone, marble and paint, Academy Award®-winning director Mel Gibson recently recreated an even more ancient world: that of Jerusalem on the final day of Jesus Christ’s life for the film The Passion of The Christ . Collaborating with an accomplished cast and a devoted crew of artisans, Gibson revisited this eternal story with the uncompromising realism and raw emotion of contemporary cinema.

    “The Passion” (taken from the Latin for suffering, but also meaning a profound and transcendent love) refers to the agonizing and ultimately redemptive events in the final 12 hours of Jesus Christ’s life, of which there are four separate accounts in the New Testament of the Bible, and the legacy of which has been reflected upon for the last 2000 years. The powerful imagery surrounding The Passion has long inspired the artistic imagination, becoming a deep and abiding influence in Western painting as well as inspiring numerous motion pictures in the last century.

    As early as the silent movies of Thomas Edison, The Passion was a theme addressed by the most ambitious of filmmakers. In 1927, Cecil B. DeMille directed the first epic treatment of Jesus’ life and death with the silent film The King of Kings. Then, in 1953, 20th Century Fox kicked off the new CinemaScope technology with The Robe, starring Richard Burton as a Roman tribune who seeks redemption after the crucifixion. By the 1960s, Biblical epics had become a whole film genre unto themselves, with George Stevens creating the monumental The Greatest Story Ever Told featuring lavish sets and an all-star “cast of thousands.”

    Around the same time, the Italian film master Pier Paolo Pasolini approached the subject in an entirely fresh way with The Gospel According to St. Matthew, which featured a completely non-professional cast, a naturalistic style and language taken directly from the Bible, and became the most successful film of Pasolini’s career. In the 1970s, The Passion was represented in two counter-culture musicals: Godspell and Jesus Christ Superstar. More recently, director Martin Scorsese was also drawn to examine Christ’s final days with his own controversial The Last Temptation of Christ.

    But never before has any filmmaker attempted to bring this story of passionate sacrifice to life with such intensely focused cinematic detail and realism. For Mel Gibson, creating such a film was a long-lived dream, taking a significant amount of his own passion and that of many others, including his Icon producing partners Bruce Davey and Steve McEveety, to turn into reality.

    “My intention for this film was to create a lasting work of art and to stimulate serious thought and reflection among diverse audiences of all backgrounds,” says Gibson.

    He continues: “My ultimate hope is that this story’s message of tremendous courage and sacrifice might inspire tolerance, love and forgiveness. We’re definitely in need of those things in today’s world.”

    Gibson first began to research the scriptures and events surrounding The Passion more than 12 years ago, when he found himself in the midst of a spiritual crisis which led him to re-examine his own faith, and in particular, to meditate upon the nature of suffering, pain, forgiveness and redemption. Gibson, who as a director last brought to life 13th Century Scotland in the Oscar®-winning Braveheart, realized he now had a unique opportunity to put his art where his heart resided. He imagined bringing the full power of modern motion picture technology - and especially current cinema’s realistic and visceral cinematography, production design and performance styles - to the subject of The Passion.

    Gibson co-wrote a screenplay with Benedict Fitzgerald Wise Blood that drew faithfully from the Gospel accounts of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John as the script’s main sources. Still, Gibson knew he was going into largely unexplored artistic territory – into the realm where art, storytelling and personal devotion meet. “When you tackle a story that is so widely known and has so many different pre-conceptions, the only thing you can do is remain as true as possible to the story and your own way of expressing it creatively,” Gibson says. “This is what I tried to do.”

    As for his decision to highlight physical realism, Gibson says: “I really wanted to express the hugeness of the sacrifice, as well as the horror of it. But I also wanted a film that has moments of real lyricism and beauty and an abiding sense of love, because it is ultimately a story of faith, hope and love. That, in my view, is the greatest story we can ever tell.”

    The Passion of The Christ is directed by Mel Gibson and produced by Bruce Davey, Gibson and Steve McEveety. Enzo Sisti is the executive producer. Among the talented crew joining the production are four-time Oscar® nominee Caleb Deschanel as director of photography, award-winning Italian production designer Francesco Frigeri, double Oscar® nominee Maurizio Millenotti as costume designer, the special effects makeup team of Keith VanderLaan and Greg Cannom (who has twice won an Academy Award®) and two-time Oscar® nominee John Wright as editor.

    ARAMAIC – AN ANCIENT LANGUAGE COMES ALIVE

    One of Mel Gibson’s earliest decisions as director of The Passion of The Christ was to have the Jesus of his film speak the same language that the historical Jesus spoke 2,000 years ago. That language is Aramaic, an ancient Semitic tongue closely related to Hebrew that today is considered by some linguists to be a “dead language,” still used in dialects by only a small number of people in remote parts of the Middle East.

    "Once, however, Aramaic was the lingua franca of its time, the language of education and trade spoken the world over, rather like English is today. By the 8th Century, B.C. the Aramaic tongue was widely in use from Egypt to Asia Major to Pakistan and was the main language of the great empires of Assyria, Babylon, and later the Chaldean Empire and the Imperial government of Mesopotamia. The language also spread to Palestine, supplanting Hebrew as the main tongue some time between 721 and 500 B.C. Much of Jewish law was formed, debated and transmitted in Aramaic, and it was the language that formed the basis of the Talmud.

    Jesus would have spoken and written what is now known as Western Aramaic, which was the dialect of the Jews during his lifetime. After his death, early Christians wrote portions of scripture in Aramaic, spreading the stories of Jesus’ life and messages in that language across many lands.

    As the historical language of expressing religious ideas, Aramaic is a common thread that ties together both Judaism and Christianity. Professor Franz Rosenthal wrote in the Journal of Near Eastern Studies: “In my view, the history of Aramaic represents the purest triumph of the human spirit as embodied in language (which is the mind’s most direct form of physical expression) . . . [It was] powerfully active in the promulgation of spiritual matters.” For Gibson, too, there was something ineffably powerful about hearing Christ’s words spoken in their original language.

    But to bring Aramaic to life on the modern motion picture screen was going to be an enormous challenge. After all, how do you create a film in a lost First Century tongue in the middle of the 21st Century?

    Gibson sought the help of Father William Fulco, Chair of Mediterranean Studies at Loyal Marymount University and one the world’s foremost experts on the Aramaic language and classical Semitic cultures. Fulco translated the script for The Passion of The Christ entirely into First Century Aramaic for the Jewish characters and “street Latin” for the Roman characters, drawing on his extensive linguistic and cultural knowledge. After translating the script, Fulco served as an on-set dialogue coach and remained “on call” to the production, providing last-minute translations and consultations. To further authenticate the language, Gibson also consulted native speakers of Aramaic dialects to get a sense of how the language sounds to the ear. The beauty of hearing this dying language spoken aloud, he recalls, was very moving.

    Ultimately, the entire international cast of The Passion of The Christ had to learn portions of Aramaic – most doing so phonetically – becoming perhaps one of the largest groups of artists ever to take on an ancient tongue en masse. For Gibson, the film’s “foreign language” had another benefit: learning Aramaic became a uniting factor among a cast made up of many languages, cultures and backgrounds. “To bring a cast from all over the world to one place and have them all learn this one language gave them a sense of common ground, of what they share and of connections that transcend language”, he says.

    It also compelled the cast to look more deeply into their physical and emotional resources above and beyond the use of words. “Speaking in Aramaic required something different from the actors”, observes Gibson, “because they had to compensate for the usual clarity of their own native language. It brought out a different level of performance. In a sense, it became good old-fashioned filmmaking because we were so committed to telling the story with pure imagery and expressiveness as much as anything else”.

    LABORS OF LARGER LOVE: THE CAST TAKES ON THEIR ROLES

    From the beginning, Mel Gibson knew a key to making The Passion of The Christ would be finding an actor capable of embodying to the highest degree possible both the humanity and spiritual transcendence of Jesus Christ. Gibson sought an actor who could lose himself in the role entirely, and whose identity would not interfere with the realism the director was seeking.

    The search led Gibson to James Caviezel, last seen in The Count of Monte Cristo. Gibson had been riveted by a picture he had seen of Caviezel – especially by the actor’s penetrating eyes and transparent expressions, which Gibson felt had the rare ability to convey the essence of love and compassion in utter silence.

    When Gibson called Caviezel early on, the actor was so taken aback his response was “Mel Who?” Gibson jovially responded “Mel Brooks”. But the conversation soon turned serious when Gibson explained the role that he had in mind for Caviezel - a role Gibson told the actor he considered so tough and fraught with potential pitfalls he himself would balk at playing it.

    Caviezel was daunted but energized by the challenge before him. It struck him as a remarkable coincidence that he had just turned 33, the same age as Jesus in the last year of his life. A practicing Catholic, Caviezel also found inspiration in his own religious beliefs and devotion, using prayer as a means to more deeply explore the character, words and tribulations of Jesus.

    But really nothing could have prepared him for the incredible journey he would undergo during the production of The Passion of The Christ. As Caviezel explains: “For day after day of filming, I was spat upon, beaten up, flagellated and forced to carry a heavy cross on my back in the freezing cold. It was a brutal experience, almost beyond description. But I considered it all worth it to play this role”.

    Gibson was quite clear to Caviezel from the start that it was his intention to film Jesus’ suffering with as much authenticity as possible, never flinching from the chaos and violence that Christ was swept up in according to accounts. Even for Caviezel, the torment Jesus endures throughout the film was terrifying at times but he says: “No one has ever showed Jesus in this way before, and I think Mel is showing the truth. Mel hasn’t used violence for violence’s sake and it has never felt gratuitous. I do think the realism will probably shock some people but that is why the film is so incredibly powerful”.

    During the demanding production, Caviezel had to face his own physical vulnerabilities in a profound way. In one of the film’s most graphic sequences, Christ is scourged – or whipped – extensively, then further flayed with an infamous Roman torture device known as a flagrum, or “the cat o’ nine tails,” a whip designed with multiple straps and embedded with barbed metal tips to catch and shred the skin and cause considerable blood loss. To capture Christ’s resulting wounds, Caviezel had to undergo grueling, full-body makeup sessions that lasted for hours. But that was just the beginning of his trials, for the irritating makeup soon caused his skin to blister, preventing him from even sleeping during this time.

    He also spent more than two weeks filming the crucifixion scenes, during which he had to carry, or more often drag under great duress, a 150-pound cross (about the half the weight of a real crucifixion cross) to Golgotha, and later to be suspended from it. Caviezel trained for the tortuous positions he would have to stand in by holding squats against a wall for up to ten minutes at a time and lifting weights to strengthen his lower back. In addition, he spent these weeks working in a loin cloth in the middle of the Italian winter, and experienced several bouts with hypothermia, often becoming so cold he could no longer speak. At times, the crew had to put heat packs on Caviezel’s frozen face just to warm up his lips enough to move.

    It was fire and ice for Caviezel, culminating in one of the most literally shocking moments on the set when both Caviezel and assistant director Jan Michelini were struck by lightning while shooting in the midst of a thunderstorm. The bolt went right through Michelini’s umbrella and zapped Caviezel as well. Astonishingly, neither man was seriously injured.

    The toll of physical and mental stress on Caviezel continued to build through the production. The actor suffered a lung infection at one point and an excruciating shoulder dislocation, as well as numerous cuts and bruises. “But if I hadn’t gone through all that, the suffering would never have been authentic,” Caviezel comments, “so it had to be done”.

    There were also unexpected psychological, and spiritual, challenges. “It was bizarre,” he admits. “I was thinking I’m just an actor playing a role but I also began to see that this couldn’t be just another role. I had no idea how much I would have to pray during this film to keep things in perspective”.

    Ultimately, Caviezel feels he learned many vital lessons. “The role changed my life in the sense that now I’m no longer afraid of doing the right thing”, he explains. “I’m now more afraid of not doing the right thing”.

    To play Mary, the mother of Jesus, Gibson went farther afield, choosing Maia Morgenstern, a renowned Romanian actress of Jewish descent. Gibson had viewed Morgenstern in a decade-old European movie and upon seeing the tenderness in her face, immediately thought of her for the role. With little else to go on, he set out on a quest to meet her, discovering she is considered one of the greatest actresses of her generation in her country.

    Morgenstern says taking the role “wasn’t so much a choice as recognizing a real chance in my life to do something important, to have a unique life experience”. To gain a greater understanding of Mary, Morgenstern scoured paintings, sculptures and literature for portraits. “I was very inspired by art in my preparation”, she says, “because seeing Mary in so many different ways, I opened myself up to see what emotions came to my soul”. She also read the script more than 200 times to make the story an integral part of her own fabric – and she found great meaning in scenes that reveal Mary’s affectionate and joyful relationship with Jesus before these events.

    As she meditated upon the nature of Mary, Morgenstern began to see the character on a larger level. “Capturing Mary for me was about understanding a way of life, about how someone transcends pain and suffering, and turns it into love”, she explains. “I believe it is the most painful thing imaginable to see your son wounded as Mary does, to lose your child as Mary does, but all she can do is keep loving and trusting and try to use all the compassion in her heart. That is what I wanted to get across on the screen”. In an interesting twist, Morgenstern was herself pregnant while playing the role, giving her further inspiration into exploring the depths of maternal love.

    Morgenstern also sees the film as having real relevance to modern audiences, regardless of their religious background. “The beauty of the movie for me is that it speaks so powerfully about humanity, and also the lack of humanity that has caused us to continue killing one another for the last 2000 years”, she observes. “These are very important things to think about”.

    Also immersing herself into the life of a woman beloved through the centuries is international film star Monica Bellucci (The Matrix series) who portrays Mary Magdalene. When Bellucci heard that Mel Gibson was making a film about The Passion, she was so intrigued by it, she immediately pursued him. “I thought it was such a strong and courageous project to take on”, she explains. “I knew it would not be an easy movie, but it is also the kind of movie that you know audiences are going to think about for a long time afterwards. This is what drew my interest”.

    After meeting with Gibson, he cast her as Mary Magdalene, which thrilled Bellucci. She comments: “I wanted to play Mary Magdalene because for me she is so human. When Jesus saves her it’s as if he makes her aware of her own worth as a human being, and for the first time she experiences a man looking at her in a different way. To me, she is a woman who gets to know herself and finds a better person than she ever thought she could be”.

    Learning Aramaic came almost naturally to Bellucci. “Maybe it is because I am Italian, but for me it felt very familiar and very beautiful,” she says. “But even though we spent so much time learning Aramaic, I think of the film almost as a silent film because we went deeper than language in the performances”.

    On the set, Bellucci was impressed not only by the devotion of the cast, but by the wide range of cultures and beliefs she encountered. “What I liked is that even though this is a movie about the life and death of Jesus, there were people from everywhere, every religion, every background, all together working on creating this one film. Not just as an actress, but as a human being, this was a great experience”.

    She also found a real affinity with Mel Gibson’s directorial style. “He’s a very instinctive director”, she comments. “He doesn’t talk a lot but it is as if he can tell you more things with his body and mannerisms than with talk. Of course, he’s very intelligent, but he also feels things very quickly and deeply and to me, this is very important for a director”.

    Also taking on an iconic role is Italian actress Rosalinda Celantano who portrays the film’s Satan, depicted as an androgynous figure who can shape-shift into many forms, spreading fear and doubt. The actress’ eyebrows were shaved to create a more hypnotic stare and she was shot in slow-motion to add a further sense of unnaturalness to her portrait. Later, her voice was dubbed with that of a male actor to increase the aura of confusion that surrounds Satan. Mel Gibson explains: “Evil is alluring, attractive. It looks good, almost normal, and yet not quite. That is what I tried to do with the Devil in the film. That’s what evil is about: taking something good and twisting it a little bit”.

    Despite the tremendous gravity and intensity of the film’s subject, which often sparked equally intense and often life-changing conversations among cast and crew, levity also prevailed on the set. “Mel kept it light whenever things were getting tough”, notes Jim Caviezel. “He knew that with the extraordinary pace of the filmmaking and the cold conditions and just the sheer difficulty of it all, we had to find ways to laugh. Luckily, Mel is also quite the practical joker”.

    FIRST CENTURY JERUSALEM IN 21st CENTURY ROME: THE DESIGN

    Once the cast was set, the filmmaking team scoured the globe for locations that could replicate the look and feel of ancient Jerusalem, and the arid surrounding Judean desert, in Christ’s time. They scouted from Morocco and Tunisia to New Mexico and Spain but the logistics of moving from one place to another were mind-boggling. Ultimately, Gibson found himself drawn to Rome which offered two extraordinary advantages: 1) the legendary studios at Cinecitta renowned for their set-building artisans, considered the finest in the world; and 2) the nearby 2,000 year-old city of Matera, an idyllically beautiful town of rocky vistas and ancient stone blocks in the Basilicata region that so brings to mind Jerusalem, it was also chosen by Pasolini as the primary location for The Gospel According to St. Matthew.

    Collaborating closely with Gibson were Italian production designer Francesco Frigeri (Malèna) and set decorator Carlo Gervasi who were given the task of designing such extensive, historically-based sets as the Temple, the Praetorium and Pilate’s Palace. Jerusalem at the time of Jesus’ death was a city of vast splendors, set among surrounding hills and lined with colorful markets, citadels, viaduct bridges and public monuments. Nothing like it exists today (destroyed in AD 70 by the Romans, the only thing that remains of Herod’s Great Temple is The Western Wall in modern Jerusalem). So in just ten weeks Frigeri designed the city sets from scratch on 2 1/2 acres of backlot at Cinecitta, with Matera’s hills and stone outcroppings used later for backdrops.

    Based on research, Frigeri’s compacted version of Jerusalem reflects the city’s mix of influences, from the Roman to the Herodian, a place of towering white columns, long flights of stone steps and Roman-style arcades, as well as of sun-baked limestone houses, open-air street bazaars and narrow, unpaved streets. With its vast space and set-building facilities, Cinecitta is one of the few places in the world it is possible to recreate on an entire city – in fact, just prior to Mel Gibson recreating First Century Jerusalem at Cinecitta, Martin Scorsese forged 19th century New York there for his epic Gangs of New York. Meanwhile, in Matera, the production team recreated the high stone walls that surrounded Jerusalem, the scenes of Jesus’ childhood and the crucifixion at Golgotha.

    Also essential to the visual style of The Passion of The Christ is the work of renowned cinematographer and four-time Oscar® nominee Caleb Deschanel. Deschanel, who previously collaborated with Mel Gibson on The Patriot, spent long hours with the director discussing his vision for the film, looking to the canvases of Caravaggio, the groundbreaking late renaissance painter, for inspiration.

    Caravaggio’s rich play of light, his palpable realism and his shifting themes of darkness and spiritual illumination completely revolutionized religious paintings in the 17th century, breaking away from the idealization of religious experience. Gibson, too, wanted to break the mold of sanitized treatments of The Passion. He saw the immediacy of Caravaggio’s style as a match for the storytelling style of the film. Gibson has said of Caravaggio: “I think his work is beautiful. It’s violent, it’s dark, it’s spiritual and it also has an odd whimsy of strangeness to it”.

    Deschanel rose to the heights of the challenge, shooting almost half the film at night or in dark interiors to attain the effect of light fighting its way out of the darkness. Notes producer Steve McEveety: “Caleb does things in a big way, just as Mel does, and his work has a scale and a breathtaking quality that captures exactly what we wanted”. It worked so well that upon seeing his first dailies, Gibson was heard to exclaim: “Caleb has created a moving Caravaggio.”

    Award-winning costume designer Maurizio Millenotti – who has worked with directors ranging from Fellini and Zeffirelli to Tornatore - was further inspired by Caravaggio’s paintings, using rich, contrasting shades of beige, brown and black. He also conducted extensive research into the wide range of culturally divergent First Century Jerusalem garments - clothing the crowds of Jerusalem in natural fiber tunics, hooded cloaks and sandals, while the Roman soldiers are adorned in typical molded breastplates and head-pieces.

    Adding to the textural detail of Millenotti’s costumes is the work of the special makeup and hair crews, led by the team of Keith VanderLaan and two-time Academy Award® winner and six-time Oscar® nominee Greg Cannom (whose recent work together includes A Beautiful Mind and Pirates of the Caribbean). Gibson brought the duo and their crew to Italy because he knew he needed the best make-up technicians in the world to create the physical realism he was seeking.

    Jim Caviezel spent an arduous 4 to 8 hours a day in the makeup chair, as he was transformed with a series of high-tech wigs and prosthetics. For the scenes of Christ’s torture and crucifixion, the makeup became even more intense as Caviezel’s face and limbs were savaged and scarred in stages. Keith VanderLaan did his own research into the anatomy of crucifixions, which modern medical science believes would have resulted in appreciable blood loss and respiratory distress, among other sufferings. Indeed, the word “excruciating” is derived from the horrific pain caused by crucifixions.

    The makeup effects team devised methods to graphically reveal the nails being driven through Christ’s hands, and the skin being scourged from Jesus’ back as he is whipped. To create authentic scars, the makeup team tattooed Jim Caviezel’s back every single day until he was covered in welts and gashes. Finally, VanderLaan also forged an articulated, rubber stand-in for Caviezel who could be suspended on the cross for certain wide shots to allow the actor some physical relief.

    Summarizes Steve McEveety: “In the end, the film turned out far grander than we expected, and this is surely because of the enthusiasm that so many people brought to the project. There isn’t anybody involved who didn’t give their whole heart and soul to the film. It’s a real collective achievement”. For Gibson, the film is a collective achievement he hopes will become a singular and personal experience for each audience member, no matter their background. Comments Gibson: “One of the greatest hopes I have for this film is that when audiences walk away from it, they will be inspired to ask more questions”.


    yakob at 12:28 PM



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