現在地 HOME > 掲示板 > Ψ空耳の丘Ψ25 > 480.html ★阿修羅♪ |
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(回答先: メル・ギブソンにユダヤ系団体から圧力 al-khawarnaq(掲示板) 投稿者 えっくす 日時 2003 年 4 月 03 日 12:02:17)
製作中の映画『The Passion』は、ラテン語とアラム語のみで演じられ、イエス・キリストの最期の12時間を描写します。
アラム語とキリストの最期(ラテン語も?) このあたりが反セム的と攻撃される理由なんでしょうね (・∀・)
Posted on Sun, Mar. 09, 2003
Report: Mel Gibson is building church for his Catholic movement
Associated Press
NEW YORK - Actor Mel Gibson's father isn't shy about admitting his belief in conspiracy theories.
Hutton Gibson, an 84-year-old activist and author, says he believes the World Trade Center was destroyed by "remote control," not airliners hijacked by al-Qaida terrorists. He insists that every pope in the last 50 years has been illegitimate, and he denies that six million Jews were killed in the Holocaust.
"Go and ask an undertaker or the guy who operates the crematorium what it takes to get rid of a body," the elder Gibson says in Sunday's editions of The New York Times Magazine. "It takes one liter of petrol and 20 minutes. Now, six million?"
Gibson and his son, the star of blockbuster films like "Braveheart" and "Lethal Weapon," are practitioners of an ultraconservative Catholic movement known as traditionalism. The small splinter group seeks to revive orthodox practices that were abandoned several centuries ago by mainstream Catholicism.
The actor has been especially forthcoming about his religious affiliation recently. Gibson is building a traditionalist church on a 9,300-square-foot complex in Malibu, Calif., for about 70 members, the Times said. He is serving as the director, chief executive officer and sole benefactor of the church, which intends to conduct its Sunday Mass entirely in Latin. The property was purchased by a church group called Holy Family.
In addition, Gibson is directing a film that depicts the last 12 hours in the life of Jesus Christ. The movie, "The Passion," is in production in Rome, with the actors speaking only Latin and Aramaic.
Gibson declined comment for the Times article, but at a news conference to announce the film last September, he acknowledged the difficulty in finding a U.S. studio or distributor for the project.
"Obviously, nobody wants to touch something filmed in two dead languages. They think I'm crazy, and maybe I am. But maybe I'm a genius," Gibson said.
Still, while Gibson and his father belong to the same movement, they don't necessarily share the same beliefs.
"He doesn't go along with a lot of what his father says," an unnamed church elder at Holy Family told the Times.
http://www.montereyherald.com/mld/montereyherald/5353470.htm