
Viewers in the UK can catch the show on iPlayer. Everyone else will have to satisfy themselves with listening to the original album on Spotify's smarter younger brother, we7.
He [Pilate] also wears a rather lovely golden laurel wreath. Laural wreaths were prizes in much older Greek athletic competitions, while Caesar made a point of refusing a crown in public to avoid looking like a monarch (although he was a dictator, he was careful never to call himself a king). Like the rest of Pilate's costume, this is not related to actual Roman dress, but to modern perceptions of what it is to be Roman.Incidentally, my other favourite female writing informatively about the accuracy of historical films, The Guardian's Alex von Tunzelmann recently posted an amusing piece on The Mission. Her conclusion? "It might all have been avoided if they'd had some karaoke bars"...Well quite.
Universal sang from the mountaintops after the $600 million global success of the Abba musical "Mama Mia" last year. Now the studio could be belting them out about a very different figure: Jesus.If this project really does come to fruition with Universal it will be the first Jesus film to be made by a major studio since Universal's Last Temptation of Christ over 20 years ago.
The studio and producer Marc Platt are in active development on a remake of "Jesus Christ Superstar." And there's a director -- at first surprising, but not without its logic -- that Platt and the studio have been talking to: Marc Webb.
0:00:00 - OvertureNotes
0:05:30 - Heaven on Their Minds
0:09:00 - What's the Buzz? - (Matt 6:34; John 14:1; Luke 10:38-42)
0:11:30 - Strange Things Mystifying - (John 12:3-7)
0:13:30 - Then We Are Decided - (John 11:47-48)
0:17:00 - Everything's Alright - (Luke 8:1-3; Matt 6:34; Mark 14:3-9)
0:21:30 - This Jesus Must Die - (Mark 14:1-2; John 11:49-50)
1:25:30 - Hosanna - (Mark 11:1-10)
0:28:00 - Simon Zealotes - (John 6:15)
1:32:30 - Poor Jerusalem - (Mark 10:45)
0:34:15 - Pilate's Dream - (Matt 27:19)
0:36:00 - The Temple - (Mark 11:15-19)
0:39:00 - Gethsemane/See my eyes - (Mark 1:32-34; Luke 11:29)
0:42:30 - I Don't Know How to Love Him
0:46:30 - Damned for All Time / Blood Money - (Mark 14:10-11)
0:51:30 - The Last Supper - (Mark 14:17-31)
0:58:00 - Gethsemane (I Only Want to Say) - (Mark 14:32-42)
1:04:30 - What's the buzz (reprise) - (Mark 14:43-50)
1:06:15 - The Arrest - (Mark 15:1)
1:08:15 - Peter's Denial - (Mark 14:66-72)
1:11:00 - Pilate & Christ - (Mark 15:2-5; Luke 23:6-7)
1:13:00 - King Herod Song - (Luke 23:8-11)
1:16:45 - Could We Start Again, Please? - (Matt 16:22)
1:20:00 - Judas's Death - (Matt 27:3-5)
1:24:30 - Trial Before Pilate - (John 18:29-38, 19:4-16; Matt 27:24,26)
1:31:30 - Superstar
1:36:00 - Crucifixion - (Mark 15:22-27,34; Luke 23:34, 46)
1:38:45 - John Nineteen: Forty-One - (John 19:40-41)
1:41:15 - [Empty Cross] - (John 10:11-15)
I always wonder with things like this how they devised them. For a start it is strange that they have done a top 12 rather than top 10. I can only assume that this is because they felt they had to include the major film Jesi down to Hunter and von Sydow, but also wanted to include lesser known portrayals such as Bale, Ferrell, Donovan and Sarandon.Jim Caviezel (The Passion of the Christ)
Christian Bale (Mary, the Mother of Jesus)
Will Ferrell (Superstar)
Jeremy Sisto (Jesus)
Martin Donovan (Book of Life)
Willem Dafoe (Last Temptation of Christ)
Chris Sarandon (The Day Christ Died)
Robert Powell (Jesus of Nazareth)
Victor Garber (Godspell)
Ted Neely (Jesus Christ Superstar)
Max von Sydow (The Greatest Story Ever Told)
Jeffrey Hunter (King of Kings)
Jim Caviezel (The Passion of the Christ)I should add that I was mainly voting on the basis of the actor's performance given what they were asked to do. Admittedly there's some guess work as to where the actor's performance starts and teh direction ends, but even so that seemed to be the best way to do it. So, take Bruce Marchiano, in places some of the things he has clearly been asked to do are crass (e.g. emptying a jar of water on a disciple's head during the Sermon on the Mount), but a lot of his work is very good in my opinion.
Henry Ian Cusick (Gospel of John)
Christian Bale (Mary, the Mother of Jesus)
Jeremy Sisto (Jesus)
Martin Donovan (Book of Life)
Bruce Marchiano (Visual Bible: Matthew)
Willem Dafoe (Last Temptation of Christ)
Pier Maria Rossi (Il Messia)
Colin Blakely (Son of Man)
Max von Sydow (The Greatest Story Ever Told)
Enrique Irazoqui (Il Vangelo Secondo Matteo)
Robert Henderson Bland (From the Manger to the Cross)
There's also a few interesting comments at The Magdalene Review, which discusses this film alongside Jesus Christ Superstar whihc was also 1973 (as was Godspell). Given that my birthday is coming up soon, I think I might have to add this to my birthday list.As Cash intones the words, "This is My beloved Son, in Whom I am well pleased," it's easy to imagine that God just must have a Southern accent. The pauper-budgeted simplicity and naivete of "Gospel Road" — its irrefutable good intentions — overwhelm the weirdness of a movie in which the director (blue-eyed, blond-haired Robert Elfstrom) plays Jesus and the star's wife is Mary Magdalene.