In Montreal, an unknown actor named Daniel is hired by a Roman Catholic pilgrimage's site ("le sanctuaire") to present a Passion play in its gardens. The priest, Father Leclerc, asks him to "modernize" the classic play the church has been using, which he considers dated. Despite working with material others consider to be clichéd, Daniel is inspired and carries out intensive academic research, consulting archaeology to check the historicity of Jesus and drawing on supposed information on Jesus in the Talmud, using the Talmud name Yeshua Ben Pantera for Jesus, whom he portrays. He includes arguments that the biological father of Jesus was a Roman soldier who left Palestine shortly after impregnating the unwed Mary. He assembles his cast, found from insignificant and disreputable backgrounds (one being a man who does pornographic voiceovers), and moves in with two of them, Constance and Mireille.
When the play is performed, the audience is thrilled; the show receives excellent reviews. Father Leclerc, however, regards it as controversial. He angrily distances himself from Daniel. The actor's life is further complicated when he attends one of Mireille's auditions. Mireille is told to remove her top, causing an outburst from Daniel in which he damages equipment and assaults a director, resulting in criminal charges. When the higher authorities of the Roman Catholic Church strongly object to his interpretation of Jesus and security forces stop a performance, the audience and actors oppose them and Daniel is injured in an ensuing accident.
Daniel is first taken by ambulance to an overrun Catholic hospital where he is neglected. He leaves and collapses on a Montreal Metro platform. The same ambulance takes him to the Jewish General Hospital. Despite immediate, skilled, and energetic efforts by the doctors and nurses, he is pronounced brain dead. His doctor asks for the consent of his friends, since he has no known relatives, to take his organs for donation, stating that they would have been able to save him if he had been brought in half an hour earlier. After his death, his eyes and heart are used to restore the health of other patients.
In the wake of his death, Daniel's friends start a theatre company to carry on his work.
Authors have written Jesus of Montreal has "many parallels" to the New Testament,[13] and "is so loaded with all sorts of fascinating allusions" between modern Quebec and the Gospels.[14] Daniel is mainly known to the public through "hearsay", and is reported to have traveled to India and Tibet, reflecting "extra-biblical legends" about Jesus.[15] The story begins when Daniel becomes a teacher to his actors, as Jesus was to his disciples.[14] Another actor named Pascal Berger, played by Cédric Noël, praises Daniel as John the Baptist hailed Jesus.[11] Pascal "loses his head" when an advertiser uses his photo to sell perfume, just as John the Baptist was beheaded.[16]
Daniel's outburst in the audition scene evokes the Cleansing of the Temple.[17][18] In the subsequent criminal case, Daniel has a Pontius Pilate-like judge played by Arcand,[12] and meets a lawyer, Richard Cardinal, played by Yves Jacques who – looking out over the city from a skyscraper – offers Daniel profit and fame, telling him "The city is yours," which is a reference to the Temptation of Christ.[10][19] After he is injured, Daniel is taken to the Jewish General Hospital. Arcand said this is a deliberate parallel with Jesus being a Jew "rejected by his own people," but Arcand depicted the hospital as efficient and better organized than other Montreal hospitals because he felt this was accurate.[20] Scholar Jeremy Cohen tied the Jewish doctor's statement "we lost him" to the idea of Jewish deicide.[21] At the end, Daniel's organs are donated to distant patients who speak various languages, echoing Jesus' miracles restoring sight to the blind and raising of the dead, as well as symbolizing his own resurrection and influence around the world.[22] Daniel's "disciples" also continue his work after he dies,[18] led by Martin, played by Rémy Girard, who is an analogue of Saint Peter, but under the guidance of Cardinal, suggesting that by institutionalizing their message it may become corrupted.[7]
Production
Development
The idea for the film came to director Denys Arcand after an actor apologized for appearing with a beard at an audition at a Montreal conservatory, saying "I'm sorry, I'm Jesus."[23] The actor explained that he had the role of Jesus in a passion play at Saint Joseph's Oratory. Arcand went to see the play and recalls, "I saw actors in a mediocre production which received shouted applause from the tourists. I decided I had to make a film."[24] The actor also spoke to Arcand about the difficulties he and his friends had in the acting profession, taking undesirable roles in TV advertisements and pornographic films.[25]
As a lapsed Catholic and self-proclaimed atheist, Arcand did not envision Jesus of Montreal as a religious film, adding, "In my film, the story of the Passion is a metaphor of an artist and his struggles and temptations."[2] He spent a year in 1987 writing the screenplay.[23] The film was made on a budget of $4.2 million,[2] with Arcand saying he got a "blank check" after his success with The Decline of the American Empire (1986).[23] This budget was unusually large for a Quebec film.[26] The film received $500,000 from the National Film Board of Canada.[27]
Robert Lepage, who played René, one of Daniel's "disciples", was a playwright and said that aside from TV and student films, Jesus of Montreal was his first major acting role. He said that the screenplay was complete and detailed, leaving less room for improvisation than he expected.[26]
Filming
The film was shot with mobile cameras on location in Montreal, which has many churches against its skyline and has been "a center of Catholicism since its beginnings".[30] Arcand stated he often shot Montreal from a distance or from the air to represent God viewing the city.[31]
He claimed that while French-Canadian churches in Montreal denied permission to shoot inside their buildings, an English-language Catholic church allowed the crew to use its space. He said this was because, although church members asked to see the screenplay, they could not read French and needed money from the rental.[2] Some scenes were shot near Saint Joseph's Oratory.[32] A substantial amount of theatrical blood was required for the Passion play scenes.[33]
Reception
Box office
In Canada, it won the Golden Reel Award, indicating the highest box-office performance of any Canadian film that year[34] with a gross of C$2.53 million in Canada.[35] It went on to gross C$3 million.[3] In English Canada, it was among only three Canadian films to gross over $500,000 between 1987 and 1990, along with Black Robe and Dead Ringers[36] with a gross of C$747,000.[35]
Jesus of Montreal did not enjoy the degree of success in France as Arcand's prior The Decline of the American Empire (1986),[37] drawing an audience of 187,827 people, the eighth highest for a Quebec film to date.[38] Generally, the film did not meet expectations in drawing audiences in countries with predominantly Roman Catholic populations, with Arcand claiming using the name Jesus in the title made the subject matter appear cliché.[39] In the U.S., Stephen J. Nichols referred to it as "not-very-popular" and said it was Martin Scorsese's The Last Temptation of Christ "to dominate the 1980s" in dramatic portrayals of Jesus.[40]
Critical reception
Jesus of Montreal enjoyed mostly positive review. The film has an approval rating of 69% on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 16 reviews, and an average rating of 6.8/10.[41]
Roger Ebert gave the film three and a half stars, calling Arcand "the best of the new generation of Quebec filmmakers", and saying "It's interesting the way Arcand makes this work as theology and drama at the same time", adding Lothaire Bluteau is perfectly cast.[17] Caryn James of The New York Times called the film "intelligent" and "audacious", particularly praising the first half "before it gives in to leaden, self-conscious Christ imagery".[42]Peter Travers of Rolling Stone wrote "Arcand has exposed a world that can't recognize its own hypocrisy or hear a voice in the wilderness".[43]Jonathan Rosenbaum called it a "must-see".[44]David Denby of New York, however, felt Jesus of Montreal was "smug from the beginning",[13] but the film was not boring thanks to Arcand's "theatricality and skill".[45]Entertainment Weekly gave the film a C−, questioning the controversy depicted in the film, saying "Hasn’t Canada, in the past 20 years, ever seen a single touring company of Jesus Christ, Superstar?" and claiming the film "flits between the smug and the ersatz mystical".[46] Hal Hinson of The Washington Post said the scenes where Daniel collects his actors are the best part of the film, but the rest is outdated.[47] In terms of religious response, Jesus of Montreal met "dead calm" on its release, in contrast to Scorsese's more controversial The Last Temptation of Christ.[48][49]
Critics in the Toronto International Film Festival ranked the film second in the Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time in 1993 and 2004 and fourth in 2015.[50] In 2003, Rob Mackie of The Guardian called the film "thought-provoking and wickedly funny" and said "Lothaire Bluteau, makes a charismatic focus whose performance makes sense of the whole thing".[51] In 2010, British critic Mark Kermode named Bluteau as one of "The 10 best screen faces of Jesus," calling him "mesmerising" and praising the film as a "genuine masterpiece" and "real cinematic miracle".[52] In 2014, Marc-Andre Lussier of the Montreal-based La Presse called the film excellent.[53]E! Online named it the third best "Jesus-inspired" film, calling it "beautiful" and "inventive".[54]
In 2001, an industry poll conducted by Playback named it the sixth best Canadian film of the preceding 15 years.[55]
^Dundjerovic, Aleksandar Sasha (2005–2006). "Contradictions and Paradoxes in Denys Arcand's The Barbarian Invasion". London Journal of Canadian Studies 21: 3.
^ ab"The English track runs slow in Canada". Variety. May 2, 1990. p. 100.
Alemany-Galway, Mary (2002). A Postmodern Cinema: The Voice of the Other in Canadian Film. Lanham, Maryland and London: The Scarecrow Press. ISBN0810840987.
Barsanti, Chris (2011). Filmology: A Movie-a-Day Guide to the Movies You Need to Know. Adams Media.
Beavis, Mary Ann (2011). "Jesus of Canada? Four Canadian Constructions of the Christ Figure". In Ellen M. Leonard; Kate Merriman (eds.). From Logos to Christos: Essays on Christology in Honour of Joanne McWilliam. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN978-1554587285.
Beckwith, Sarah (2003). Signifying God: Social Relation and Symbolic Act in the York Corpus Christi Plays. University of Chicago Press. ISBN0226041336.
Bouchard, Larry D. (2011). Theater and Integrity. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press. ISBN978-0810125629.
Dunđerović, Aleksandar (2003). The Cinema of Robert Lepage: The Poetics of Memory. London and New York: Wallflower Press. ISBN1903364337.
Gaudreault, André (2016). "The Passion of Christ". The Silents of Jesus in the Cinema (1897–1927). New York and London: Routledge. ISBN978-1317806738.
Gervais, Marc (2007). "Jésus de Montréal: The Vision of Denys Arcand". In Malone, Peter (ed.). Through a Catholic Lens: Religious Perspectives of 19 Film Directors from Around the World. A Sheed & Ward Book. ISBN978-1461718789.
Melnyk, George (2004). One Hundred Years of Canadian Cinema. Toronto, Buffalo and London: University of Toronto Press. ISBN0802084443.
Nichols, Stephen J. (2008). Jesus Made in America. InterVarsity Press.
Pallister, Janis L. (1995). The Cinema of Québec: Masters in Their Own House. Associated University Presses. ISBN0838635628.
Pike, David Lawrence (2012). Canadian Cinema Since the 1980s: At the Heart of the World. Toronto, Buffalo and London: University of Toronto Press. ISBN978-1442698321.
Reinhartz, Adele (2013). Bible and Cinema: Fifty Key Films. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN978-0415677202.
Reinhartz, Adele (2007). Jesus of Hollywood. Oxford University Press.
Schaberg, Jane (2004). The Resurrection of Mary Magdalene: Legends, Apocrypha, and the Christian Testament. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN1441141758.
Simons, Tony (2004). "Denys Arcand: Jésus de Montréal". Where are the Voices Coming From?: Canadian Culture and the Legacies of History. Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi. ISBN904201623X.
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