Post by Admin on Jan 6, 2023 13:32:39 GMT -4
Report: Mel Gibson Set To Begin Filming ‘Passion Of The Christ’ Sequel
Mel Gibson is reportedly about to begin filming the long-awaited sequel to “The Passion of the Christ”.
According to “alternative” movie news site World of Reel, Gibson will begin production on the new film — “The Passion of the Christ: Resurrection” — sometime in late spring, with Jim Caviezel on board to reprise the role of Jesus.
As the site points out, Gibson has been developing the sequel for about a decade, having tapped “Braveheart” screenwriter Randall Wallace to write the script.
“Resurrection” will reportedly focus on the 24 hours of Jesus’ passion, and the three days between the crucifixion and ultimate resurrection.
“The Passion of the Christ”, which cost $30 million to make, brought in more than $612 million worldwide, making the film one of the most successful independent movies in history.
This guy doesn't believe that the Holocaust happen oh his daddy didn't oops how will he still believe in Christ SMH.
Mr. Gibson's father, Hutton Gibson, has repeatedly denied that the Holocaust happened. Before the release of "The Passion of the Christ," Hutton Gibson said that accounts of the Holocaust were mostly "fiction" and asserted that there were more Jews in Europe after World War II than before.
Mel Gibson, for his part, when asked by an interviewer in early 2004 whether the Holocaust happened, responded that some of his best friends "have numbers on their arms," then added: "Yes, of course. Atrocities happened. War is horrible. The Second World War killed tens of millions of people. Some of them were Jews in concentration camps."
But in the same interview, Mr. Gibson said his father had "never lied to me in his life," and Holocaust scholars have cited those and other statements as evidence that he had failed to disassociate himself clearly from his father's views.
"For him to be associated with this movie is cause for concern," said Rafael Medoff, director of the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies in Melrose Park, Pa., and the author of an annual study of Holocaust denial. "He needs to come clean that he repudiates Holocaust denial, and that he understands the Holocaust was not just another atrocity that occurred in World War II along with other atrocities."
Mel Gibson is reportedly about to begin filming the long-awaited sequel to “The Passion of the Christ”.
According to “alternative” movie news site World of Reel, Gibson will begin production on the new film — “The Passion of the Christ: Resurrection” — sometime in late spring, with Jim Caviezel on board to reprise the role of Jesus.
As the site points out, Gibson has been developing the sequel for about a decade, having tapped “Braveheart” screenwriter Randall Wallace to write the script.
“Resurrection” will reportedly focus on the 24 hours of Jesus’ passion, and the three days between the crucifixion and ultimate resurrection.
“The Passion of the Christ”, which cost $30 million to make, brought in more than $612 million worldwide, making the film one of the most successful independent movies in history.
This guy doesn't believe that the Holocaust happen oh his daddy didn't oops how will he still believe in Christ SMH.
Mr. Gibson's father, Hutton Gibson, has repeatedly denied that the Holocaust happened. Before the release of "The Passion of the Christ," Hutton Gibson said that accounts of the Holocaust were mostly "fiction" and asserted that there were more Jews in Europe after World War II than before.
Mel Gibson, for his part, when asked by an interviewer in early 2004 whether the Holocaust happened, responded that some of his best friends "have numbers on their arms," then added: "Yes, of course. Atrocities happened. War is horrible. The Second World War killed tens of millions of people. Some of them were Jews in concentration camps."
But in the same interview, Mr. Gibson said his father had "never lied to me in his life," and Holocaust scholars have cited those and other statements as evidence that he had failed to disassociate himself clearly from his father's views.
"For him to be associated with this movie is cause for concern," said Rafael Medoff, director of the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies in Melrose Park, Pa., and the author of an annual study of Holocaust denial. "He needs to come clean that he repudiates Holocaust denial, and that he understands the Holocaust was not just another atrocity that occurred in World War II along with other atrocities."