Idol Chatter

Idol Chatter: February 2007 Archives

Thursday February 15, 2007

Categories: Movies

'Amazing Grace,' Drop by Drop

Does God work through thunderbolts or more subtly? That's the underlying theme of "Amazing Grace," an earnest, informative, and often stirring biopic of the heroic William Wilberforce, who battled the slave trade for nearly 20 years in England's Parliament.

As a chronicle of those decades, "Amazing Grace" is the story of repeated, crushing failure. Its heroes are Hollywood's traditional worst nightmare: intolerant, fanatical Christians who keep raving about religion and Won't Settle Down. Refusing to tolerate the slave trade, scorning appeasement or phaseouts, Wilberforce's team hammers complacent British society over and over and over. We see good men quarrel with each other, ruin their health, and almost despair over a cause that seems impossible to win. (We also see much shouting in Parliament, and plenty of elaborate 18th-century wigs.) What we don't see--true to British history and true to many spiritual autobiographies--is a lot of success. At least, not for a long, long time.

The center of it all is Wilberforce himself, played by Ioan Gruffudd as an ecstatic nature-lover and God-worshipper who feeds beggars at his own table and jumps up in crowded rooms to sing a hymn (guess which one?). At first, it's hard to believe a politician as saintly as Wilberforce actually existed. But a subsequent Wiki search confirms that, yes, Wilberforce really was that good--he was even a co-founder of the original Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. In fact, Wilberforce and his fellow evangelical, anti-slavery Parliamentarians were sniffily called the "Saints" by the other lawmakers.

The film begins several years into Wilberforce's crusade, when he is broken with disappointment, dependent on an opiate, and about to give up: "I was chosen for this task and I failed," he says. We see flashbacks about his initial hopes, and then the machinations of legislators who undermined him. Enter a Lovely Youth Thing who will restore his faith in himself and his cause. Unfortunately, actress Romola Garai is ill-cast and unpersuasive as Wilberforce's love interest and future wife; she seems to view tête-à-têtes about slavery as opportunities for flirting and bosom-heaving.

More believable is Albert Finney's excellent portrayal of John Newton, the former slave ship owner who penned "Amazing Grace." Newton is that rarity on the silver screen: a passionate and outspoken Christian who doesn't dabble in euphemisms: "I am a great sinner, and Christ is a great savior," he famously declares when Wilberforce visits him at his church. It's Newton who, according to the film if not history, encourages Wilberforce to begin his political work. Years later, as Wilberforce inches closer to his goal, Newton has gone blind. In one moving scene, Newton raises his sightless eyes and thanks God he now knows how wrong he was to traffic in humans: "I once was blind, but now I see. At last it's true."

Strangely, the film spends little time with these humans--the ones whose lives were at stake, the black men and women whom so few really saw in Wilberforce's day. North African singer Youssou N'Dour has a quiet dignity and strength in the role of Oloudauh Equiano, a black abolitionist who wrote down his experiences as a slave and influenced many of the "Saints." Mostly, however, the movie shows us white men talking in oak-paneled rooms.

Towards its end, the film downplays Wilberforce's religiosity. Still, the power of his spirit comes through, and we can sense the weary thankfulness mingled with his joy when at last England's slave trade is abolished. "When people speak of great men, rarely do they think of peace," says one of his fellow lawmakers. Wilberforce is that brilliant and inspiring exception: a man who steadily, year after year, without violence and without fireworks, tried to stop a great evil. Rather than use lightning bolts, as one of the characters says, "God sometimes does his work with gentle drizzle."

-- Posted by Laura Sheahen

Tuesday February 13, 2007

Categories: DVDs

Best Punchline by a Christian Insect

I'd like to think that Christian vegetables--like VeggieTales' Larry the Cucumber--will never be passé. There is, however, a new kid on the block in evangelical children's entertainment: Max Lucado's "Hermie, a Common Caterpillar" series.

The series' latest DVD is "Milo, the Mantis Who Wouldn't Pray." Starring a bug proprietor who loses his snack shack, the show focuses on Milo's inability to talk to God about his problem. He sings about prayer, he dances, he wonders if he should use fancier words like "Thou," he asks why heavenly help doesn't arrive. But for upwards of 20 minutes, Milo the mantis doesn't say a certain word we're waiting for.

It comes at last. After Milo realizes that God has, in fact, sent him help in the form of his friends, he vows to change his ways. "From now on," he pledges, "I'll be a praying mantis."

-- Posted by Laura Sheahen

Wednesday February 7, 2007

Categories: Pop Culture

The 2007 Beliefnet Film Awards!

Beliefnet's now-annual answer to the Oscars is underway. The Beliefnet Film Awards honor the best mainstream films that explore spiritual topics and themes. This year, we've got three categories, each with five nominees:

Best Spiritual Film
Babel
Children of Men
Flags of Our Fathers
The Nativity Story
The Pursuit of Happyness


Best Spiritual Performance
Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls)
Nicolas Cage (World Trade Center)
Nick Nolte (Peaceful Warrior)
Will Smith (Pursuit of Happyness)
Virginia Madsen (Prairie Home Companion)

Best Spiritual Documentary
An Inconvenient Truth
The Ground Truth
The Saint of 9/11
Shakespeare Behind Bars
When the Levees Broke

To watch clips from the nominees, read and participate in the debate about them, and cast your votes for the winners, click here.

Advertisement

Search This Blog

feed icon Subscribe

RSS Feed

Receive updates from Idol Chatter

Calendar

Advertisement

Advertisement


About Beliefnet

Our mission is to help people like you find, and walk, a spiritual path that will bring comfort, hope, clarity, strength, and happiness. More about Beliefnet.

Legal

Copyright © Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.

Advertisement

Report as Inappropriate

You are reporting this content because it violates the Terms of Service.

All reported content is logged for investigation.