Hollywood drops religion from religious story
Imagine that.
Thanks to Wilberforce, the movement's most visible champion, Britain ended slavery well before America, but the abolitionist cause in America, too, was driven by Christian churches more than is often acknowledged. Steven Spielberg's 1997 "Amistad," about the fate of blacks on a mutinous slave ship, also obscured the Christian zeal of the abolitionists.
Nowadays it is all too common--and not only in Hollywood--to assume that conservative Christian belief and a commitment to social justice are incompatible. Wilberforce's embrace of both suggests that this divide is a creation of our own time and, so to speak, sinfully wrong-headed. Unfortunately director Apted, as he recently told Christianity Today magazine, decided to play down Wilberforce's religious convictions--that would be too "preachy," he said--and instead turned his story into a yarn of political triumph. The film's original screenwriter, Colin Welland, who wrote the screenplay for the acclaimed and unabashedly Christian "Chariots of Fire," was replaced.
The movie "Amazing Grace" nods occasionally in the direction of granting a role to faith in social reform, but it would do us all well to supplement our time in the movie theater by doing some reading about the heroic and amazing Christian who was the real William Wilberforce.
Labels: Social justice
1 Comments:
I wonder if the critic for the Wall Street Journal actually saw the movie. I thought the film did a very good job highlighting Wilberforce's faith and how his campaign against slavery sprang from it. Most of his confederates were shown to be Evangelical Christians as well. I read this review before I saw the film and so was prepared to be disappointed. My only disappointment was the role of Wesley in forming a resistance to slavery was ignored. In the less than two hour film, I felt that the portrayal of Wilberforce's faith which was the motive for all that he did was very well portrayed. jhg
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home