Flash Movie Review: Son of God
The usual way we learned about extraordinary, historical individuals was at home, school or in books. We may have been taught about these larger than life people due to the country we lived in, the religion we practiced or the affect they had on the general population where we resided; though there could be many other reasons. Already aware of the importance of these people, if one wants to make a film about them, they would need to do their due diligence in getting all the facts straight before documenting events onto the screen. There are a couple of films that come to mind that achieved this, such as Charlton Heston (Ben-Hur, Planet of the Apes franchise) as Moses in The Ten Commandments and Ben Kingsley (Hugo, Schindler’s List) as Mahatma Gandhi in Gandhi. So now here is this dramatic film about Jesus Christ that was produced by Mark Burnett, known for the reality television shows Survivor and Shark Tank. I discovered after watching this movie that it was born out of the History Channel’s mini-series The Bible. It says a great deal about this piece of work; Jesus Christ getting spun off, how pathetically sad. Diogo Morgado (Star Crossed, Mami Blue) had the challenge of portraying Jesus and he failed miserably. I found him to be a dull, unenlightened caricature who wandered from place to place for two hours. Darwin Shaw (Casino Royale, The Bible-TV) was only a tad better with his character Peter. The script was offensive to me. I am not an expert on biblical quotes but some of the things that people were saying in this film did not sound right to me. The sets were uninspired and the long shot repeatedly used of the city looked like a bad computer graphic made by a Commodore 64 computer. (You older folks may get this analogy.) If one is going to invest the time and money into a movie project of this magnitude, then they need to take the time to do it right. While watching this dull movie I felt it looked like it was just thrown together without much thought. I cannot even say this film would have been better as a TV movie or mini-series; it would make no difference. I think I can accurately say most people have heard of Jesus Christ and probably know more about his story than this film. There were a few scenes where blood was shown.
1 1/2 stars
Posted on March 5, 2014, in Drama and tagged 1 1/2 stars, darwin shaw, diogo morgado, drama, historical, jesus christ, mark burnett. Bookmark the permalink. 12 Comments.
Nice review … π
Thank you.
The local film critic here, whose critiques are in line with my views, gave this film a half a star out of five. I’ll definitely pass.
I believe there are many reviewers who felt the same way. With my star system going from 1 to 4 I am on par with your local film critic. Thanks for coming by and telling me. Take care.
great review – and wow – this was the best part –
“If one is going to invest the time and money into a movie project of this magnitude, then they need to take the time to do it right.
which applies to many things – not just movies –
~y.
How true is your statement. This was just a bad movie. Thanks for coming by to leave your comments.
Jesus
WWJD? Thanks for the fun comment. At least I took it as fun.
Indeed. π Why is it with these sorts of films that everybody except Jesus is a dirty and scruffy, and Jesus looks like he just stepped out of a shampoo commercial?
I know I agree with you. So bizarre in my opinion; thanks for coming by to leave your comments.
I’m curious now as to whether or not you are looking forward to Noah with Russell Crowe. Would you be more interested in the entertainment value or the biblical accuracy?
I am actually interested in the director Darren Aronofsky who did The Black Swan. To answer your exact question I am more interested in the entertainment value.