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God
in the Movies Somewhere around the beginning of James Cameron’s TITANIC, the gross plutocrat played by Billy Zane gazes at the long, phantomy length of the ship from the dock, and intones “God Himself could not sink this ship.” With that kind of christening, of course you know the ship is going to go down, that it is a miracle it gets away from the dock afloat. Not that this expresses any particular kind of theology about the film, other than hubris of puny humans. Generally, God is relegated to prop or plot device in films, particularly 'religious' films of the sandal and sand variety. In fact, to my knowledge, the only way God could get a SAG card (Screen Actors Guild - to get one you have to have speaking parts in films), is to rely on THE TEN COMMANDMENTS. The very deep baritone of The Voice in that film generally just sets up a series of plot devices, i.e., giving Charlton Heston (“Moses”) a set of rules that enable the other actors to know exactly what to break. LIST OF REVIEW TITLES | LINKS | MY E-MAIL: ERIK@EEWEEMS.COM Everything
is COPYRIGHT©1992-2005 ERIK E. WEEMS
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