Shuck and Jive
Thursday, April 01, 2010
Friday Film
If you are looking for entertainment to celebrate Torture and Execution of Jesus Day (also known as "Good" Friday)
...look no further than First Presbyterian Church of Elizabethton!
We are showing a film at 6:30.
I hadn't seen this film before.
It is called He Who Must Die.
It is a 1957 film based on the novel Christ Re-Crucified by Nikos Kazantzakis. It is in French (with English subtitles).
Filmed on the island of Crete and set in the early 1920's, when Greece was occupied by the Turks, Jules Dassin's Celu Qui Doit Mourir (He Who Must Die) tells the story of a small village's efforts to stage their Passion Play, an event that occurs once every seven years. The leading citizens, including the wealthy Patriarcheos (Gert Frobe) and the priest Grigoris (Fernand Ledoux), have managed to keep the local Turkish military ruler (Carl Mohner) satisfied with their quiet subservience, each protecting his status and authority within the community in the process.
But when Grigoris makes his selections for the roles in the Passion Play, there are unintended consequences, particularly for Manolios (Pierre Vaneck), a tongue-tied, stammering young shepherd who is chosen to play Jesus. On the eve of the celebration and the play, a large group of refugees, survivors of a town burned by the Turks, led by the priest Photis (Jean Servais), arrives seeking help.
Grigoris and the other town leaders turn them away, at first spreading the lie that the refugees carry cholera to make the townspeople fearful of them. But Manolios and two others are troubled by the seeming contradiction between the priest's behavior and the teachings of Jesus -- which Manolios is starting to take very seriously. Confronted by the starvation deaths of children and old men among the refugees, Manolios soon finds himself facing an array of unpleasant truths about the failings of the men he has always respected.
The village is soon divided, friend against friend and father against son, as Manolios appeals to the better nature of his neighbors -- his closest allies include Patriarcheos's son and Katerina (Melina Mercouri), the village prostitute. These events further enflame Grigoris's anger over what he perceives a open rebellion and the threat of disorder, which the Church will not condone -- and he soon must appeal to the Turkish occupiers, to stop Manolios and all that he represents.
I am not sure if it is up to the cinematic quality of Greaser's Palace but it will do in a pinch.
Join us Friday at 6:30!
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Kazantzakis is one of the greatest writers ever. He should be given honorary membership for all eternity in the Jesus Seminar. He embraced its wisdom and truths long before it was fashionable. I would have never made it through seminary without Nikos Kazantzakis.
ReplyDeletelove, john + www.abundancetrek.com + "What is required of us is that we love the difficult and learn to deal with it. In the difficult are the friendly forces, the hands that work on us. Right in the difficult we must have our joys, our happiness, our dreams: there against the depth of this background, they stand out, there for the first time we see how beautiful they are." -- Rainer Maria Rilke
I am looking forward to this film. I hadn't read this book. I read his Last Temptation of Christ and the saw the movie that followed.
ReplyDeleteI wish I were able to take you up on your invitation to see this film. I live in western Oklahoma, a pretty good step away from your village.
ReplyDeleteStill, when you scan the audience to see who showed up, although unseen know that I am there in spirit!
Maybe I can find it on NetFlix . . . Kazantzakis' The Last Temptation was one of the earliest books I read that contributed to where I am today.
ReplyDeleteHappy Friday!