King of Kings, the director's cut
Friday, April 6, 2012 at 10:23AM
Peter Neary-Chaplin in Comment, King of Kings, Spiritual, alternative christianity, easter story, emerging christianity, greatest story ever told, ministry of words, power of story, power of words, spiritual, spirituality, storytelling, unorthodox priest

 My TV schedule last Easter described how the making of the movie King of Kings (dir. Nicholas Ray, 1961) occasioned such trouble. Not in the sense of causing a great spiritual awakening in those who watched it, but in the consternation that the director's radical approach to the gospels caused among studio executives. 

There was much hype during the filming, the banning of interviews with the leading man, Jeffrey Hunter, amongst other attempts to stoke the fires of publicity. And the sense of alarm among production bosses was such that they made Hunter re-record all his lines in a more assertive way, and the ending of the movie was re-shot by another director. 

Perhaps when the story of Jesus is being turned to commercial purposes, then the commercial overrides every other consideration. How is the story playing? Is it a story that people like, or identify with?  Is it within some kind of spiritual bell curve, safely where the numbers will repay the investment, where the crowd cover is everywhere and any challenge can be safely contained within expected boundaries, within the group? 

Perhaps the story of Jesus is always being turned to someone's commercial purpose, not perhaps for money, but for position, or the need to be right, or the need to judge or disenfranchise the other. So for this Easter, I wish you your own director's cut of the story of Jesus, your own unique and authentic engagement with and understanding of this great and timeless story. I hope that whatever voice you hear the words of Jesus in may be an authentic voice that speaks directly to your holy of holies, and that the voice might sound something like your own.

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