Ben-Hur remake: Revenge, redemption, inspiring backstory
By Rusty Wright, Special to ASSIST News Service (ANS Movie Review)
MOUNT HERMON, CA (ANS – August 14, 2016) – Do you remember the classic MGM movie, Ben-Hur?
Charlton Heston, the chariot race, the galley slaves forced to row at
"ramming speed"? The film won eleven Oscars as it displayed passion and
pageantry, betrayal and bitterness, grace and redemption.
Now,
Mark Burnett and Roma Downey – with MGM and Paramount – have remade
this film for a new generation. It opens August 19 (USA).
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First to finish, last to die
Two
brothers in first-century Palestine split over the Roman occupation.
Messala sides with Rome, Judah Ben-Hur with his Jewish heritage.
Messala's rage sends Ben-Hur into slavery for years.
When
combat turmoil frees him, Ben-Hur returns to Jerusalem seeking revenge
against Messala. A chariot race for the ages ensues – filmmakers spared
no effort to make the signature event thrilling. "First to finish,
last to die" is the watchword as the brothers claw for advantage.
But
something happens inside Ben-Hur to break the cycle of hatred. It
involves a carpenter who years ago helped him, which kindness he seeks
to reciprocate. The carpenter’s words and life transform him.
As
filmgoers prepare for the excitement, romance, and drama, understanding
the movie's backstory can enhance their appreciation for the tale and
its nineteenth-century writer.
A chance encounter?
In 1876, Civil War general Lew Wallace took a train to Indianapolis for a convention. En route, he encountered Robert Ingersoll, a noted agnostic, who wanted to converse. Wallace agreed, provided Ingersoll let him choose the subject.
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"Is there a Devil?" continued Wallace. "I don't know: do you?" countered Ingersoll.
Wallace,
who considered himself absolutely indifferent to religion, continued
with questions about heaven, hell, the hereafter. Ingersoll responded
the same, then launched into a discourse.
"I
sat spellbound," Wallace later wrote, "listening to a medley of
argument, eloquence, wit, satire, audacity, irreverence, poetry,
brilliant antitheses, and pungent excoriation of believers in God,
Christ, and Heaven, the like of which I had never heard."
Skeptic jolts the General
Ironically,
the skeptic's arguments jolted Wallace from his spiritual
indifference: "I [was] now moved as never before, and by what? The most
outright denials of all human knowledge of God, Christ, Heaven, and the
Hereafter which figures so in the hope and faith of the believing
everywhere." Ashamed of his poor knowledge about faith, he resolved to
study and learn.
Convinced
a novel with Jesus as protagonist would be poorly received, Wallace
fashioned the story of a young Jewish noble – Judah Ben-Hur – who,
betrayed by his brother, would suffer years in slavery before returning
home to exact revenge. Along the way, a young Nazarene gave him a drink
of water that helped sustain his life. Years later, Ben-Hur would seek
to return the favor as the Nazarene was heading toward crucifixion.
Bestseller
Harper
Brothers published the novel in 1880. It became the best selling book
of the nineteenth century and has never been out of print. A stage play
and two earlier film adaptations have kept it before the pubic.
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Rated PG-13 (USA) "for sequences of violence and disturbing images."
www.BenHurMovie.com Opens August 19 (USA) International opening dates
Copyright © 2016 Rusty Wright
Photo captions: 1) Judah Ben-Hur (Jack Huston) and Esther (Nazanin Boniadi). (Photo: ShareBenHur.com).
2) Mentor and trainer Ilderim (Morgan Freeman). (Photo: Viacom). 3)
Jesus (Rodrigo Santoro) gives water to slave Ben-Hur (Jack Huston)
(Photo: ShareBenHur.com). 4) Ben-Hur (Jack Huston) offers water to Jesus (Rodrigo Santoro) (Photo: ShareBenHur.com). 4) Rusty Wright.
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