Houston Chronicle Sunday

New movie aims to show why Paul the Apostle is still relevant.

New movie aims to show why Paul is still relevant

- By Emily McFarlan Miller

It’s been 14 years since Jim Caviezel played the role of Jesus in “The Passion of the Christ.”

The actor, who previously starred in the 1998 war movie “The Thin Red Line,” said he didn’t know then how director Mel Gibson’s 2004 film would break him, how it would haunt him.

He said he didn’t know “it was going to be my path.”

But now that path has led him back to a story straight from the Scriptures, playing Luke, one of Christiani­ty’s four evangelist­s, in the new film “Paul, Apostle of Christ.”

So did the film’s message of forgivenes­s and what Caviezel calls “ardent love.”

“It’s a very arduous task to treat someone with polar opposite views with the same dignity and respect that you would treat a friend. That is the core message of the film, and it’s what makes this film,” he said.

“Even though it was a couple thousand years ago, it’s very relevant today.”

“Paul, Apostle of Christ” opened in the top 10 at the box office last weekend, according to Box Office Mojo.

The movie about Paul comes as the apostle is having something of a moment with a number of new books published about him in the past few years.

They include “Paul: A Biography” by N.T. Wright and “Paul: An Apostle’s Journey” by Douglas A. Campbell, both released earlier this year, and “Reading Paul with the Reformers: Reconcilin­g Old and New Perspectiv­es” by Stephen J. Chester and “Paul and Gender: Reclaiming the Apostle’s Vision for Men and Women in Christ” by Cynthia Long Westfall, both recognized in Christiani­ty Today’s 2018 Book Awards.

“I don’t know if it’s Providence that is directing us to refocus on the teachings of Paul, but it’s quite a wonderful experience to see it all come together,” said Rich Peluso, senior vice president of Affirm Films, part of Sony Pictures.

Paul resonates, not only because he dominates so much of the New Testament, but because he’s a familiar figure in our current media landscape — the type to say “‘boo’ to every goose and then say ‘boo’ to all the swans as well, just in case,” according to author and biblical scholar Wright, who said before the film’s release he hadn’t seen it but was “intrigued.”

That makes Paul unlike many of history’s great thinkers — and also presented some difficulty bringing his story to the screen, Peluso said. Paul’s story pans 60 years and 10,000 miles and includes a blinding encounter with Jesus, a shipwreck, imprisonme­nts, miracles, feuds and more.

That’s why filmmakers decided to focus on Paul’s last days in prison before his execution, though a TV miniseries is a possibilit­y depending on the success of “Paul, Apostle of Christ,” Peluso said.

In the film, Luke (Caviezel) meets with Paul ( James Faulkner) in prison to record his dramatic conversion and other reflection­s into what would become the Book of Acts.

Meantime, the early church struggles against persecutio­n by the Roman government — and how to respond to it. “Christ called us to care for the world, not rule it,” one character protests when others discuss breaking into the prison to free Paul and overthrow the government.

“At this moment in our culture and in our world I think we really are starting to doubt this idea of grace and mercy and forgivenes­s and love, and Paul’s story is such a strong example of just the enormity of God’s grace and love, and I think it’s something that’s so needed right now,” writerdire­ctor Andrew Hyatt said.

Hyatt said he hoped the film would help viewers see biblical figures like Paul as real people, “not beautiful statues with halos on their heads” and books like Acts and Paul’s letters as “lived experience,” not something that came from a “preachy, heady space.”

He added that he hopes the movie appeals to both Christian and non-Christian audiences — that it’s not too “preachy,” while also respecting the concern some Christians have about Scripture in the hands of Hollywood filmmakers.

“I think there’s a big hesitancy when it comes to Hollywood Bible movies, and I think there’s kind of a nervousnes­s and a fear: ‘Oh no, did they screw it up again?’ ” Hyatt said.

“I just want to encourage the audience this is a film by people (for whom) the story is as important to them as it is to the audience. We want people to get excited and be encouraged.”

 ?? Columbia Pictures ?? Jim Caviezel, left, plays Luke and James Faulkner is his colleague Paul in the biblical drama “Paul, Apostle of Christ.”
Columbia Pictures Jim Caviezel, left, plays Luke and James Faulkner is his colleague Paul in the biblical drama “Paul, Apostle of Christ.”

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