Variety Hates Religious Theme of Movie Because...Well... it's Religious

By Warner Todd Huston Posted in Comments (4) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »

Robert Koehler of Variety is upset at Director Mark Pellington over his new film, "Henry Poole Is Here." He can't believe the audacity of a movie with religious themes actually having religious themes in it. Why it's a crime, you see. Koehler is so upset that he blurts out the memorable critique of, "not since 'The Passion of the Christ' has a mainstream Hollywood product insisted so firmly in faith"!

Wow, "insisted" firmly in faith? Oh, the humanity. Why there oughtta be a law!

You can just feel the anguish that Koehler has that this director dared to feature religious conversion, religious discussions, and a serious attempt to legitimize faith in his film. Of course, to Koehler, that fealty to faith absolutely must be at the expense of science. In fact, he sees "jabs at science" at every turn in the flick. Koehler is entirely incensed that anyone dare make a movie that presents belief in God in a positive light as a force that can affect "growth" in people. The outright hostility that Koehler has for religion is shocking. It has to be seen to be believed.

Most of this review is mere outrage at religion, with very little actual film criticism. In fact, about the only real film criticism appears in the last two paragraphs of a 10 paragraph article. The rest of it is a recounting of the plot along with Koehler's venomous anti-religious bile interspersed between.

I won't bother with the legitimate criticism of the style, technique and acting in the film, but here are the vitriolic, anti-religious segments of the review.

  • (The) Pic's tendency to lecture on the power of faith and religion and on the demerits of science seems to assume an almost childlike audience that needs to be spoon-fed Pablum.
  • Christian moviegoers will have to show up in great numbers to keep the film from being doomed to something far less than sleeper status.
  • So insistent is the film that lack of belief in God is a personal failure, nonbelievers are likely to feel offended.
  • Not since "The Passion of the Christ" has a mainstream Hollywood product insisted so firmly in faith while its deprecation of science and medicine has seemed singularly harsh.
  • Understandably peeved, particularly when Esperanza begins bringing over some of her church congregants and her priest...
  • Esperanza asks him, "Don't you believe in God?", the question seemingly a grave accusation, implying Henry has some growing to do.

So, religion is "Pablum," religion being in a film automatically makes non-believers "offended," religion must be a "deprecation of science," non-religious people confronted by religious people are "understandably peeved," etc., etc.

Koehler also imagines that the film is especially anti-science. Saying...

The doc's nurse, for good measure, is so inept that she can't apply a decent shot, just one of a few jabs here at medicine and science.

Add to all this Patience (Rachel Seiferth), the checkout clerk at Henry's grocery store, weighing in against science to Henry and citing no less than Noam Chomsky on the subject.

I'll not necessarily discount the possibility since I haven't seen the movie, but I'd lay odds that the counterpoints to science aren't meant to eliminate science as a worthy thing, but just to highlight that there is also something other than science. Couldn't it be that the film wasn't necessarily anti-science, just pro faith/religion?

Not to Koehler.

It just has to be a fact that being religious wholly is at the exclusion of science.

There is so much hate for religion in this review that it obscures any actual film criticism making the piece not worth much as film criticism. It is, though, a perfect example of how much Hollywood hates religion.

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Interesting, isn't it, that people like this have no problem suggesting that christianity be stripped from even MOVIES.

Another interesting thing to note:

There has been no beheadings, car-burning riots or rampant destruction of property. Just some cranky Christians who will just be cranky.

Compare that to another religious group's reaction to some cartoons.

It was just a few years ago that a movie made by a church group got a rating other than G for a film they made that was 100% clean, about football in high school.

I don't remember if it was PG or PG-13, but the reason for the rating was because, get this, in the movie..... people pray.

Indoctrination that the MPAA thinks is too overt for children. Keep in mind, they can have sex and bad language, but don't you dare pray! Kids might be watching!

*screams and runs around*

heh.

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Dependence is Slavery.

and was rated 'PG' by the MPAA:


The impression I got from reading some of the information on the site was that the 'PG' rating resulted from the plot line revolving around the main character's wife trying to get pregnant (Talking about getting pregnant/having children as opposed to descriptions of the act). I couldn't find the MPAA's write up though!


omnia dicta fortiora si dicta Latina

Yeah, the coach and his wife are trying to have a baby, but can't.

The producers were originally told that due to the overt religious themes, the movie was going to be rated PG.

When the MPAA released its public statement (after that news was made public) they then claimed that it was because of the 'mature nature' of infertility.

Frankly, they didn't like that when at a crossroads in life, the coach prayed.

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Dependence is Slavery.

to see that in print! How many OpEd pieces would have been written? How would the NYT have written that one up???

omnia dicta fortiora si dicta Latina

 
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