Wednesday, November 20, 2024
La Femme Fatale in PULP FICTION
Thursday, November 7, 2024
THE ROAD is a religious movie. Get Over it.
If you peruse any THE ROAD video on YouTube you'll see a plethora of comments from people discussing what they think happened to the planet. "It's global warming." Or "it's an asteroid, like the one that wiped out the dinosaurs." Or "it was from nuclear war." (the last one I could almost agree with if it weren't for the religious symbolism in nearly every scene).
While everyone is free to think what they want--I have to admit--it really bugs me that film lovers these days don't have the foggiest clue how to analyze and see the blatant clues right in front of them. It's like they're unable to put together the pieces of the puzzle the movie lays out for them. There's never any mention of war or climate change or an asteroid. Come on, people! Think like the filmmakers. Try to put yourself in the minds of the writer and the director and imagine why each scene is presented the way it is.
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| The Road 2009 |
And while I certainly appreciate a film that very covertly credits Christianity in a positive light, I must admit that it also saddens me. There was a time in Hollywood, just before the 1960s and the start of the Vietnam War, when Christianity in Hollywood films was depicted as positive.
This is not the case now.
Other than THE ROAD in 2009 and Mel Gibson's THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST in 2004, there hasn't been a big-budget Hollywood film that portrays Christianity, especially the Catholic Church, in a good way. Most Christian films are produced without major studios backing these projects. For example, Mel Gibson financed PASSION by himself because nobody else would partner up with him.
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| The Passion of the Christ 2004 |
I recall one Christian movie I walked in on at the end that had a short video inside its end credits scene. It was the main character of the movie telling its audience that it's extremely difficult for movies with Christian messages to get produced in Hollywood. The actors and those involved had to fund and produce the film itself because nobody else would.
Let that sink in.
It seems like there's an attack against Christianity in Hollywood these days. With the amount of films against Christianity, it seems likely so. I wonder what would happen if a movie were made disrespecting and depicting other religions negatively? Would they get made? I doubt it.
Why is that?
That's why I'm grateful for THE ROAD. Even though its religious subtext gets typically overlooked for scientific reasons, like climate change, at least the real movie aficionados, like you and me, know that THE ROAD is a pro-Christian movie warning us about inhumane treatment, and how faith in God and forgiveness in others will promote a healthy planet.

