Christianity
teaches that Jesus was both God and man. That he could be both at
once is the central mystery of the Christian faith, and the subject
of "The Last Temptation of Christ." To be fully man, Jesus
would have had to possess all of the weakness of man, to be prey to
all of the temptations--for as man, he would have possessed God's
most troublesome gift, free will. As the son of God, he would of
course have inspired the most desperate wiles of Satan, and this is a
film about how he experienced temptation and conquered it.
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That,
in itself, makes "The Last Temptation of Christ" sound like
a serious and devout film, which it is. The astonishing controversy
that has raged around this film is primarily the work of
fundamentalists who have their own view of Christ and are offended by
a film that they feel questions his divinity. But in the father's
house are many mansions, and there is more than one way to consider
the story of Christ--why else are there four Gospels? Among those who
do not already have rigid views on the subject, this film is likely
to inspire more serious thought on the nature of Jesus than any other
ever made.
That
is the irony about the attempts to suppress this film; it is a
sincere, thoughtful investigation of the subject, made as a
collaboration between the two American filmmakers who have been
personally most attracted to serious films about sin, guilt and
redemption. Martin
Scorsese,
the director, has made more than half of his films about battles in
the souls of his characters between grace and sin. Paul
Schrader,
the screenwriter, has written Scorsese's best films ("Taxi
Driver,"
"Raging
Bull")
and directed his own films about men torn between their beliefs and
their passions ("Hardcore,"
with George
C. Scott as
a fundamentalist whose daughter plunges into the carnal underworld,
and "Mishima," about the Japanese writer who killed himself
as a demonstration of his fanatic belief in tradition).
Scorsese
and Schrader have not made a film that panders to the audience--as
almost all Hollywood religious epics traditionally have. They have
paid Christ the compliment of taking him and his message seriously,
and they have made a film that does not turn him into a garish,
emasculated image from a religious postcard. Here he is flesh and
blood, struggling, questioning, asking himself and his father which
is the right way, and finally, after great suffering, earning the
right to say, on the cross, "It is accomplished."
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The
critics of this film, many of whom have not seen it, have raised a
sensational hue and cry about the final passages, in which Christ on
the cross, in great pain, begins to hallucinate and imagines what his
life would have been like if he had been free to live as an ordinary
man. In his reverie, he marries Mary Magdelene, has children, grows
old. But it is clear in the film that this hallucination is sent to
him by Satan, at the time of his greatest weakness, to tempt him. And
in the hallucination itself, in the film's most absorbing scene, an
elderly Jesus is reproached by his aging Apostles for having
abandoned his mission. Through this imaginary conversation, Jesus
finds the strength to shake off his temptation and return to
consciousness to accept his suffering, death and resurrection.
During
the hallucination, there is a very brief moment when he is seen
making love with Magdelene. This scene is shot with such restraint
and tact that it does not qualify in any way as a "sex scene,"
but instead is simply an illustration of marriage and the creation of
children. Those offended by the film object to the very notion that
Jesus could have, or even imagine having, sexual intercourse. But of
course Christianity teaches that the union of man and wife is one of
the fundamental reasons God created human beings, and to imagine that
the son of God, as a man, could not encompass such thoughts within
his intelligence is itself a kind of insult. Was he less than the
rest of us? Was he not fully man?
There
is biblical precedent for such temptations. We read of the 40 days
and nights during which Satan tempted Christ in the desert with
visions of the joys that could be his if he renounced his father. In
the film, which is clearly introduced as a fiction and not as an
account based on the Bible, Satan tries yet once again at the moment
of Christ's greatest weakness. I do not understand why this is
offensive, especially since it is not presented in a sensational way.
I
see that this entire review has been preoccupied with replying to the
attacks of the film's critics, with discussing the issues, rather
than with reviewing "The Last Temptation of Christ" as a
motion picture. Perhaps that is an interesting proof of the film's
worth. Here is a film that engaged me on the subject of Christ's dual
nature, that caused me to think about the mystery of a being who
could be both God and man. I cannot think of another film on a
religious subject that has challenged me more fully. The film has
offended those whose ideas about God and man it does not reflect. But
then, so did Jesus.
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