I wont be going to see the film because it has been deliberately doctored by the Hollywood crap-merchants to appease the christian right book-burners. Pullman is a good fiction writer and I enjoyed the trilogy a lot. His anti Catholic stance is not central to the story but does add to the flavour and removing it as Hollywood has strips the movie of integrity. I feel there should be absolutely no pandering to any group on so called religious grounds as it is contrary to the spirit of freedom of expression. It shows again how radical Christianity and Islam are indistinguishable, which shows there is nothing special about any particular faith and that crazy is crazy wherever you find it.
Tao
Perhaps the producer should make two versions of the movie, a sanitised version and an unsanitised version . . . just so that I can make a comparison between the two.
If that isn't possible, I'll have to get my hands on the book to get a taste of the author's passion. If the sanitised version of the story is the only version of the movie I can get, I fear I'd be struck down by the disappointment of having to watch a movie less offensive than it should have been, and knowing that I could have been offended more but wasn't being provoked as much.
It's quite possible that I'd be blown away by the anti-Catholic (ok I'm not Catholic, but just for argument's sake), anti-Christian, anti-religion, etc. sentiment and find it all repulsive and boring by the way its overdone. But I'd have to see it.
Whatever it is, I want amusement. If it's meant to make fun of something in a friendly way, it's ok if it's entertaining. If it's overdone, it'll just be boring.
Much like
Life of Brian, which I've been told was a parody on Jesus Christ, I think it's ok to just poke fun at concepts in a religion. The question is whether it's a "parody" or whether it seeks to vilify, demonise or belittle a religion, or whether it's just a story that entertains us with a political struggle. Think
X Men. Is it trying to inspire religious hatred?
It may indeed refer to religious influences in real-life, in much the same way Stargate and Star Trek do in certain episodes. In Stargate it's the Ori, and during the last few seasons there is a question, if a bunch of people present us with a religion that says their god(s) created the universe and we must embrace its teachings, and they perform miracles in front of us, do we accept their claims?
In Star Trek Enterprise, one episode was a story of a planet that followed a religion where it was believed that the so-called Makers constructed a bunch of Spheres that allowed transdimensional beings into our universe. The people split up over whether those Spheres were created in six or seven days, or something like that. That was obviously a reference to Genesis in the Bible. At the end of the episode, everyone on the planet was killed off with no survivors. They fought one another to death. Captain Jonathan archer takes one of its most prominent religious leaders to the home planet to show them what's happened to their once glorious world.
Neither of them name religions in the real-world, but they describe similar paradigms. Does the actual story reference real-world organisations directly? ie. Catholic Church, Anglican Church, Episcopal Church? Does it address adherents of a particular religion, or labels associated with them directly, like "Christian" or "Christianity" Does it quote verses from the Bible? . . . or does it simply say "Church." Church doesn't have to refer to Christians or Christianity. It may refer to a religion and its organisation, but not necessarily a group of people in the real world.
Is this is a Fantasy story, or is it set in the real-world? Like
Tomb Raider and
The Da Vinci Code?
X Men?
The League of Magnificient Gentleman? . . . or is it more like Lord of the Rings, Star Wars and Narnia?
But anyway . . .
I just had another thought. Let's suppose someone makes a movie that is designed to impress Western viewers, but misrepresents Chinese culture. Ching Chong China Man is made to look stupid and unarticulate. I think I anticipate a lot of rioting in Chinatown . . . the decadent West has done it again. The arrogant white devils are once again flaunting their pompous and condescending attitude and lording it over a millenia-old civilisation.
Could Christians be seen as a kind of Ching Chong China Man that is being ridiculed in the story? Could this be another Danish cartoon? You tell me. You've read the story right?
I reckon it is still possible to have a movie Christians can accept and like even if it has elements that they'd find provocative if it's properly marketed. The author is an artist that has to know how to shape his artwork in a way, even if it is provocative, is still seen as an excellent piece of artwork. It's like Tin Tin. In some places the Tin Tin cartoons show some slight racism and ignorance of the cultures it depicted, but most of the content is ok. Take the television series 24 for example, which featured Muslim/Islamic phenomena in at least 2 of its seasons. Was this offensive to Muslims?
If the author is a militant religion-basher, the warped mindset will show up in his work. Is this another Tin Tin or another Sheikh Al Hilali?
Just thought I might throw that in.