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Hollywood Revival?NATIONAL CATHOLIC REGISTERToday, Christians are saving Hollywood at the box office. Tomorrow, movie theaters might just be one more place Christians save the culture.
“A Christian project saved the global box office from 2001
to 2003 with Tolkien’s trilogy, The Lord of the Rings. Then another
Christian project, The Passion of the Christ, saved the global cineplexes
in 2004. And yet another Christian story is going to save the entertainment industry
this year with C.S. Lewis’ The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.”
It should be no surprise that, in the golden years of Hollywood, Catholic filmmakers like John Ford, Frank Capra, Fred Zinnemann and others dominated the new art form. What happened after that? Some remained, but as dissenting Catholics. Others turned against the Church angrily and criticized it. In many cases, believers were squeezed out by an insular Hollywood culture. But sins of omission probably played the biggest role in leaving Hollywood bereft of Catholic influence. After all, to end up with a Catholic artist whose work draws power from a sacramental worldview, you need to start out with a Catholic who has been told what the sacraments are in the first place. Polls suggest that, for the past two decades, the Church hasn’t done a very good job of catechizing. Thus, movies, like the other arts, are another casualty of the Church’s failure to catechize Catholics in the 1960s and ’70s. But that may be changing. The pontificate of Pope John Paul II brought about a seismic shift in the Church. Now, a seismic shift isn’t an earthquake it’s a shift deep down in the earth that starts inevitable changes that aren’t obvious until later. By teaching courageously and inspiring a youth movement, John Paul quietly but surely changed the direction of the Church at its most fundamental level. After the long pontificate of John Paul, yesterday’s energetic dissenters are out of energy, and the catechism teachers who were too embarrassed to catechize are more likely to be replaced by World Youth Day veterans excited by the faith. And as young people are slowly becoming catechized again, they are growing up in a new cultural environment. Our children met Eucharistic adoration proponent J.R.R. Tolkien because he’s a top draw at the theater. They associate Mel Gibson with Jesus Christ and the cross, not Mad Max and Lethal Weapon. For our children, an allegory about Christ is the movie sensation of this winter. Yes, these improvements in catechesis and in the culture are small, incremental changes now. But if the number of Catholics who know their faith and see it validated by the culture keeps growing incrementally, it will one day hit a critical mass and begin growing exponentially. We might be surprised to find that the seismic changes started by Pope John Paul II will move mountains in our lifetime. Today, Christians are saving Hollywood at the box office. Tomorrow, movie theaters might just be one more place Christians save the culture. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT The Editors. "Hollywood Revival?" National Catholic Register. (December 4-10, 2005). This article is reprinted with permission from National Catholic Register. All rights reserved. To subscribe to the National Catholic Register call 1-800-421-3230. THE AUTHOR The editors of the National Catholic Register. Copyright © 2005
National Catholic Register
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