The Golden Compass Again
We made it out to see the new movie, The Golden Compass on Friday, and I gotta say it was pretty good. If you (like me) haven't read the books, you better get there on time and pay attention. Otherwise you'll spend a lot of time trying to figure out who's who and what's going on. If you plan on bringing the kids, keep the PG-13 rating in mind: There are some parts that young kids would find scary, and while the violence isn't graphic, there's quite a bit of it.
I wrote a little bit about the controversy surrounding this movie in an earlier post. I don't think the anti-God message is as strong as I'd heard it was, but it is there. I think you would pick up on it even if you weren't looking for it, but I say that as someone who went there looking for it. Rather than anti-God or anti-Christian even, the story needed a villain for Lyra (the heroine) to triumph over. It turns out that the Magisterium, which is apparently "The Church" is that villain. It's not so surprising that an atheist author would portray The Church as a body of money-hungry and power-hungry control freaks, who are the enemies of free will and free thought. That's not a unanimous view of the church in our world, but it's not that uncommon, and this never claimed to be a Christian movie. I think it's unfortunate that religion is portrayed that way in the movie, because the real church doesn't need any more bad publicity or people associating the church with bad people they need to avoid.
Having said all that, we did enjoy this flick. I read in an article somewhere that the awesome armored ice bears are loosely based on me, being as big and bad and fearless as I am! (cough)
I wouldn't mind commenting on some more specific scenes, but I don't want to post any spoilers. And I would fight an ice bear to get a voice like Sam Elliott's!
This is derifter (not Les Nessman) saying so long, and may the good news be yours.
Labels: movies, the golden compass
2 Comments:
From what I have read, the books contain the in-your-face anti-God stuff, while the movie tones it down considerably. I imagine that's so they can suck more kids into reading the books.
BTW, I like to fish for crappie in the Ozarks.
That's what I've heard about the books, too. I'm not sure if it's a sinister plan or just great marketing. Either way, I liked the movie but probably won't read the books. Thanks for stopping in.
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