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THE PASSION OF CHRIST--AND THE
PASSION OF GAY-BASHERS
HOLLYWOOD -- Non-appearances can be
deceiving.
By Tom Plate
March 2, 2003
While New Zealand director Peter
Jackson was bobbing on the Oscar stage much of Sunday night (Feb. 29)
scooping up awards for "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King,"
Australian superstar Mel Gibson was nowhere to be seen. In the battle of the
South Pacific, the Kiwis, at the Oscars at least, emerged as the clear
winners.
The otherwise popular Gibson, the
director and producer of a controversial new film, was indeed in the Academy
Awards audience, but the controlled cameras panned away: The actor himself
had chosen to avoid the limelight as a star awards presenter on stage,
according to reports. As a healthy percentage of Hollywood big shots
comprise U.S. Jews, Gibson assumed a safer boo-immune profile in the wake of
charges by critics and Jewish leaders that his "The Passion of the Christ"
takes the low road of anti-Semitism.
In general, Hollywood is extremely
tolerant of all points of view and usually intolerant of intolerance. But
the anti-Semitic "Passion" may prove a historic testing case for the
entertainment industry, for it is also extremely tolerant of profits. Since
it opened, "Passion" has been rivaling "Rings" in box-office clout. Will
"Passion" garner Oscars next year if its profits turn out to rival "Rings"?
The profits paradox is in part the
cultural paradox of California. The state is really two states of mind.
One is represented by the
ultra-chic cosmos of San Francisco and Hollywood; the other is symbolized by
the back-to-basic suburban nests of evangelical Christians now scooping up
"Passion" tickets -- and evidently enjoying the sight of Jewish priests
approving the bloody beating of Christ.
Their motivation may be
anti-Semitic or pro-inspirational, but the movie tellingly depicts the last
half-day in the earthly life of Christ with uncommon violence. I trust the
critics I have read enough to know this is not a ticket I wish to buy, but I
defend absolutely the right of everybody --including Christian rightists --
to see it.
The whole point of tolerance is to
offer all people the widest possible freedom of intellectual and cultural
scope. California's suburban righteous infrequently evidence much
understanding of that, which has given another Hollywood superstar a boost.
Apparently, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, thinks he needs a
diverting issue to take people's minds off the cascade of state budget cuts
that are making various constituencies apprehensive. The issue in question,
which also appeals to Republican President George W. Bush, is gay marriage.
Pointedly, the recently elected
mayor of San Francisco, a true city of light in many respects, supports it.
Gavin Newsom ordered city officials to issue licenses to same-sex couples.
In response, the governor wants the licensing terminated, and Bush even
proposes a constitutional amendment to prohibit same-sex marriage. This is
America?
Worse yet, in this age of
instantaneous information and global video transmission, the California
spectacle is making people around the world wonder. Perhaps one might get
Arnold's attention by suggesting the gay-bashing may not be good for tourism
or for the image of a governor once accused of overt sexual harassment of
females. Why politically harass gays?
Even Asia -- ordinarily a
paternalistic family culture of the most traditional kind -- has been moving
toward more tolerance. In Cambodia, legendary King Norodom Sihanouk,
watching television news coverage of gay weddings in San Francisco, affirmed
his culture's respect for personal sexual preferences. In Taiwan, observers
expect the local government to legalize some form of gay marriage before
long. In Hong Kong, where the Chinese-language news media has begun to
change its traditional oppositional tune toward gays and lesbians, same-sex
marriage advocates have been increasingly relying on an article in the
territory's 1997 mini-constitution that would confer an absolute right to
marriage and family without reference to sexuality.
By contrast, in Australia, a pair
of gay Melbourne men who married in Canada has had to petition the country's
courts for local certification as a married couple. Let's hope they don't
have to endure anything like the violent passion of Christ to have their
basic rights respected.
Alas, John Howard, the conservative
prime minister, is doing a Schwarzenegger, condemning the idea. His
Australian Liberal Party recently shelved an amendment to its platform that
would have honored gay marriages. Ironically, the country's so-called
"Liberal" party (it’s
actually the more conservative of the two main ones) always campaigns on
minimizing government interference in the private lives of citizens.
But how that political philosophy
can be squared with telling people what their sexual practice must be in
order to marry is difficult to discern. Here in Los Angeles, we'd probably
say: That's just politics. Perhaps, but the Schwarzenegger/Howard game is
certainly a crude and bigoted form of entertainment, even by Hollywood
standards. |