ReasonForOurHope

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Summer Box Office Predictions 2025

 After going over the movies that are coming out this summer, I always enjoy trying to predict the summer box office for the following year.

Michael Crichton once said that studios spend millions of dollars every year trying to predict box office.  But in the end, it is all guess work.  There is no magical formula and no one gets it right all the time.  



That is certainly the case with me.

In 2016, I got 6 out of 10 right.  By 2017, I improved to 8 out of 10. 2018 was my best year, where I made it to 9 out of 10 and my order of highest grossers was even more accurate.  2019 I did great with the top 7, but the bottom three I had all wrong.  I didn't do it in 2020 because of the pandemic.  2021, my top 3 were all accurate.  If Hotel Transylvania hadn't been pulled, I believe my top 5 would have been accurate.  However I WAY over guessed the appeal of In the Heights and I underestimated Free Guy.  

In 2022, I once again got 8 out of 10, but I only correctly predicted the #2 movie as Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.  I had no clue that Where the Crawdads Sing would make it to the top 10.

In 2023 and 2024, I got 7 out of 10, but I didn't correctly predict any in the correct position.  



I am going to try again this year.  I may be wrong about my number one and two, but we will see.









1.  How to Train Your Dragon








The main thing I look for to top the box office is a family movie that parents feel safe in bringing their children to see.  How to Train Your Dragon is an incredibly safe bet.  Like the Lion King remake, I think that parents and children will greatly enjoy seeing the movie done in live action.


2.  Jurassic World Rebirth





As bad as the last few movies in the franchise were they made a ton of money.  And with this movie promising to be a new start, I think it will do just as well as the rest in the franchise.




3. Lilo & Stitch

 





Like How to Train Your Dragon, this should be a safe bet for families.  The only reason I have it a little bit further down on the list is that Disney has lost some of its credibility in the last few years.  We'll see if this restores it.

4.  Superman


David Corenswet as Superman gazing upwards as he takes flight, while the red, yellow, and blue colors of his suit blur into the background. The tagline "Look Up" is inscribed below him, with the film's logo and release date on the bottom.

I am actually rooting for this movie to rank much higher on this list.  But looking at where Man of Steel ranked in the box office and keeping in mind that there is a lot of superhero saturation, good word of mouth will be essential for this film.


5.  Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning






I'm predicting that this one will do slightly better than the previous film because they are billing this as the final installment in the series, which may drive more business.


6.  Thunderbolts

Members of the Thunderbolts standing next to each other.




This movie is made up of mostly supporting characters and the MCU is a little bit on the wane.  But I think that this will do decently.


7. Fantastic Four: First Steps

The Fantastic Four team together in their blue and white uniforms sitting on a couch with a retrofuturistic city skyline behind them. The tagline "Welcome to the Family" is displayed above with the film's logo and release date displayed below.



On Marvel is pushing this one very hard, but based on the box office for all of the other Fantastic Four films, I think this will do worse than Thunderbolts


8.  From the World of John Wick: Ballerina





The insistence of putting John Wick in the title is clearly a business decision.  John Wick is a dependable brand of action and they are hoping that this will transfer to this film.  To be honest, it is working on me, because I want to see this as well.




9.  Karate Kid: Legends




I think Cobrai Kai might have pushed interest in this movie and the action looks decent.

10. The Naked Gun





I have been waiting for a big comedy to dominate the box office.  The teaser made me laugh a lot so I'm hoping this will be the one.



ALTERNATES


 F1



The reason I didn't put this one higher because I wasn't sure how much interest there is in racing movies.  I based the prediction on how Ford vs. Ferarri and Gran Turismo did.



28 Years Later





The last movie in the series did okay at the box office but not great.  But if there is enough nostalgia, it might do better.


 



Thoughts?

Monday, April 28, 2025

Film Flash: The Accountant

   







15 words or less film review (full review to follow soon)

An enjoyable shoot-em-up sequel.  Good chemistry between the leads, but sometimes tries too hard.








Sunday, April 27, 2025

Divine Mercy Sunday 2025

   




(repost from 2018)

Very few feast days are as important to me as today.

Much of what is printed below I have written before.  But with each year I age, I become more and more aware of how much I need God's Mercy.

There is a story about Socrates I heard once.  A phrenologist came to Athens and claimed to be able to read people's souls by studying the contours of their head.  Socrates, being a person who was open to new ideas asked to be tested.  The phrenologist examined Socrates and said that his skull showed he was proud, lustful, greedy, wrathful, and other things like this.  Socrates' followers began to laugh at this diagnosis of their moral teacher.  But Socrates very seriously rebuked them and said, "This man is telling the truth.  I struggle with these every day of my life."

I bring this up because sometimes when I tell people that I am the biggest sinner that they've met, they think I am only giving some kind of pious hyperbole.  But it is far from the case.  The only soul I can see into is my own and I see much darkness there.  No, I am not about to catalogue all of my vices.  But sometimes when I receive compliments of a moral or spiritual nature, I burn a little inside.

This is partly my fault.  I have found that when people give you compliments the most gracious thing to do is to accept it and say thank you.  Otherwise, that person feels admonished.  Also, I think I put on too much of a holy exterior image.  That isn't to say that I am not spiritual.  But sometimes I feel like the charge Jesus leveled against the Pharisees applies to me:  "Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye are like unto whited sepulchers, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but are within full of dead men's bones, and of all uncleanness." (Matt 23:27)

Especially as a religion teacher, the weight is sometimes overwhelming (though I speak as a weak man).  I stand in front of others proclaiming Christ while I too often fail in following Him.  Every day I pray before Jesus, "Please do not hold my sins against my students, but help me to give them only You!"

I bring all of this up only to emphasize how absolutely important today's feast is to me.

The Feast of Divine Mercy reminds me that though my sins burn and blister my heart, Jesus has an ocean of Mercy to drown that fire.

I know that God owes me nothing.  Or rather, what He owes me is wrath.  But He wants to give me Mercy.  It would be just if I received punishment.  But He wants to pour out forgiveness.

If it were not for Christ's incredible emphasis on His Mercy, I think that I would fall into despair.  It takes so much faith to believe that God is not fed up and disgusted with my lack of progress in the spiritual life.  But even that is my own projection of my weak love onto the infinite love of God.

And even here in this struggle, there is a grace.  As 2 Corinthians 4:7 says, "But we hold this treasure in earthen vessels, that the surpassing power may be of God and not from us. "

My own weakness is there to keep me from ever thinking that the good that comes about through me is somehow from me.  All the good that I have ever done is only by the power of God.  He is the treasure, I am the earthen vessel.  Glory be to Him.

So today, please turn to His Mercy.

It does not matter what your sin is, He wants to forgive you!  He wants to put that old life behind you and begin again.

It does not matter how many times you've turned back and turned away.  Today, return to His Mercy.

Yes, you have sinned.  Join the club.  I am a lifelong member who has not graduated from even the most basic lessons.  I say this not to minimize my sins or your sins.  Every sin is another nail to pierce the Flesh of the Lamb of God.  We must be truly sorry and accept responsibility for them and resolve to sin no more by God's grace.

And then we must embrace His Mercy.

As one website writes:

The Divine Mercy message is one we can call to mind simply by remembering ABC: 

A - Ask for His Mercy. God wants us to approach Him in prayer constantly, repenting of our sins and asking Him to pour His mercy out upon us and upon the whole world. 

B - Be merciful. God wants us to receive His mercy and let it flow through us to others. He wants us to extend love and forgiveness to others just as He does to us. 

C - Completely trust in Jesus. God wants us to know that the graces of His mercy are dependent upon our trust. The more we trust in Jesus, the more we will receive. 

(http://www.thedivinemercy.org/message/)


And on this Feast Day, I invite you to pray with me not only the Chaplet of Divine Mercy (click this link to learn how) and pray with me the Divine Mercy Litany:

The Love of God is the flower—Mercy the fruit. 

Let the doubting soul read these considerations on Divine Mercy and become trusting.

Divine Mercy, gushing forth from the bosom of the Father,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, greatest attribute of God, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, incomprehensible mystery, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, fountain gushing forth from the mystery of the Most Blessed Trinity
, I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, unfathomed by any intellect, human or angelic,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, from which wells forth all life and happiness,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, better than the heavens,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, source of miracles and wonders, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, encompassing the whole universe, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, descending to earth in the Person of the Incarnate Word,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, which flowed out from the open wound of the Heart of Jesus, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, enclosed in the Heart of Jesus for us, and especially for sinners, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, unfathomed in the institution of the Sacred Host,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, in the founding of Holy Church, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, in the Sacrament of Holy Baptism, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, in our justification through Jesus Christ,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, accompanying us through our whole life,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, embracing us especially at the hour of death,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, endowing us with immortal life, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, accompanying us every moment of our life,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, shielding us from the fire of hell, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, in the conversion of hardened sinners,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, astonishment for Angels, incomprehensible to Saints,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, unfathomed in all the mysteries of God,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, lifting us out of every misery, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, source of our happiness and joy, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, in calling us forth from nothingness to existence,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, embracing all the works of His hands,
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, crown of all of God's handiwork, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, in which we are all immersed, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, sweet relief for anguished hearts, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, only hope of despairing souls, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, repose of hearts, peace amidst fear, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, delight and ecstasy of holy souls, 
I Trust in You.
Divine Mercy, inspiring hope against all hope, 
I Trust in You.

To The Divine Mercy
I fly to Your mercy, Compassionate God, who alone are good. Although my misery is great and my offenses are many, I trust in Your mercy, because You are the God of mercy; and, from time immemorial, it has never been heard of, nor do heaven or earth remember, that a soul trusting in Your mercy has been disappointed.

O God of compassion, You alone can justify me and You will never reject me when I, contrite, approach Your Merciful Heart, where no one has ever been refused, even if he were the greatest sinner (1730).

[For Your Son assured me:] Sooner would heaven and earth turn into nothingness than would My mercy fail to embrace a trusting soul (1777).

Jesus, Friend of a lonely heart, You are my haven, You are my peace. You are my salvation, You are my serenity in moments of struggle and amidst an ocean of doubts. You are the bright ray that lights up the path of my life. You are everything to a lonely soul. You understand the soul even though it remains silent. You know our weaknesses and, like a good physician, You comfort and heal, sparing us sufferings — expert that You are (247).

In Thanksgiving
O Jesus, eternal God, I thank You for Your countless graces and blessings. Let every beat of my heart be a new hymn of thanksgiving to You, O God. Let every drop of my blood circulate for You, Lord. My soul is one hymn in adoration of Your mercy. I love You, God, for Yourself alone (1794).


To the Mother of God
O Mary, my Mother and my Lady, I offer you my soul, my body, my life and my death, and all that will follow it. I place everything in your hands. O my Mother, cover my soul with your virginal mantle and grant me the grace of purity of heart, soul and body. Defend me with your power against all enemies, and especially against those who hide their malice behind the mask of virtue (79). Fortify my soul that pain will not break it. Mother of grace, teach me to live by God's power (315).

O Mary ... a terrible sword has pierced your holy soul. Except for God, no one knows of your suffering. Your soul does not break; it is brave, because it is with Jesus. Sweet Mother, unite my soul to Jesus, because it is only then that I will be able to endure all trials and tribulations, and only in union with Jesus will my little sacrifices be pleasing to God. Sweetest Mother, continue to teach me about the interior life. May the sword of suffering never break me. O pure Virgin, pour courage into my heart and guard it (915).

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Summer Movie Season 2025

  It is now April, so it's time to look forward to one of my favorite seasons of the year: Summer movie season.


It used to be that Summer movie season would begin in June.  But then it became standard for the big movies to come out in May.  


I know as a cinephile I should be more interested in when the "important" movies come out just before the major awards.  But I think the movies of summer are pure cinema and tend to be the ones remembered long after people have forgotten the plot of whatever film won the Oscar for Best Picture.

Here is a list, with a few brief thoughts of my own, including on a scale of 1-5 stars my likelihood of seeing it in theaters (1 being “Not at all” 5 being “Cannot wait!”).


MAY 2

Thunderbolts
Members of the Thunderbolts standing next to each other.

I know that Marvel has been a bit on the wane, but this movie looks more fun than the last few MCU outings.  I like the characters and how they are represented as the rejects and misfits of this world, but that they have to band together to save the day.  It is a simple trope, but one that works for me.(*****)

The Luckiest Man in America
I am a big fan of Paul Walter Hauser and I used to watch Press Your Luck all the time when I was a kid.  this could be an interesting viewing, but I may wait for streaming  (***)


MAY 9

Juliet and Romeo
Zero interest. (*)






MAY 16

Final Destination: Bloodlines

Ironically, this series won't die.  Since I'm not a fan of horror, I probably won't see it. (*)

Hurry Up Tomorrow
Everything about this screams pretentious dreck (*)


MAY 23
Mission: Impossible: The Final Reckoning
Everything has been pointing to this being Tom Cruise's final outing as Ethan Hunt, who in my opinion has become the American James Bond.  I am expecting a lot of catharsis to close out the series along with some death-defying stunts to have me on the edge of my seat. (*****)

Lilo & Stitch
I am not big fan of the original animated film, so I am not very excited about this one, though it does look like it has some cute moments.   (**)


MAY 30
Karate Kid: Legends
Watching Cobra Kai was a lot of fun, so I'm willing to take a chance on this movie.  The big plus is that the action looks very much inspired by star Jackie Chan's style.  (***)

JUNE 6

From the World of John Wick: Ballerina
This could be a soulless cash grab, but the trailers have me excited.  It looks to have the same level of action and Ana de Armas is a very good actress.  Plus I really want to see more of that flamethrower vs. firehose scene  (****)

The Phoenician Scheme

Maybe I'm the only one in the world who thinks Wes Anderson's movies are terrible.  But there you have it. (*)

The Life of Chuck
 

I like the cast, especially Mark Hamill in that grandfatherly role.  But I need to see more before I get interested. (**)


JUNE 13

How to Train Your Dragon

I shouldn't want to see this movie.  It looks like a simple live-action remake of an excellent animated film.  Maybe it's just nostalgia or that the score during the trailers has me emotional, but I think I might see this in the theaters. (***)


Materialists
This looks like it could be an interesting independent romantic drama, but I am going to wait for streaming. (**)



JUNE 20

28 Years Later

Even though I do not like horror, I may be tempted to see this one.  The concept looks good and the production design looks excellent.  (***)

Elio
I don't know exactly when the "can-do-no-wrong" PIXAR lost their way, but I have very little interest in seeing this. (**)

JUNE 27
F1

The director of Top Gun: Maverick is trying to make a visceral experience for his audience with this one.  With the ever-charismatic Brad Pitt, I think I will be seeing this in theaters.  (****)

M3GAN 2.0

I enjoyed the first one a lot more than I thought I would.  But the trailers for this looks awful.  It looks like what they did to Gremlins 2.  Stupid, stupid, stupid. (*)

JULY 2
Jurassic World Rebirth


Hope always springs eternal that this franchise will recapture the magic of the original.  With the cast and crew reset, I'm hoping this story will be more intelligent than the last.  I am happy that they are including scenes from the original book that were not included in any of the films.  (****)

JULY 11
Superman
David Corenswet as Superman gazing upwards as he takes flight, while the red, yellow, and blue colors of his suit blur into the background. The tagline "Look Up" is inscribed below him, with the film's logo and release date on the bottom.
I am trying very hard not to get my hopes up, but everything I am seeing is making me more and more excited for this film.  Even the things that people are lukewarm about, like the released Fortress of Solitude scene, have me very excited that James Gunn understands the character.  I am so hopeful that this will reset the entire cinematic DCU  (*****)



JULY 18

Smurfs
On a solid blue background, a Smurf's finger is seen about to press a red button with text reading "PARTY" in white.

Nothing about this seems interesting or original.   (***)




JULY 25
Fantastic Four: First Steps
The Fantastic Four team together in their blue and white uniforms sitting on a couch with a retrofuturistic city skyline behind them. The tagline "Welcome to the Family" is displayed above with the film's logo and release date displayed below.
This is the opposite of Superman where the more I am seeing, the less I am interested.  While I like the retro look and the prospect of seeing a comic-accurate Galactus, something about this feels off.  I think its that this is the exact plot of the second Fantastic Four movie from 18 years ago (*****)




August 1
The Bad Guys 2

Didn't see the first one (*)

The Naked Gun
The short teaser I saw hit my funny bone in just the right way.  If they get this right, this could be the funniest movie of the year.  (*****)

AUGUST 8

Freakier Friday


Didn't see the first one (*)


AUGUST 15

Nobody 2


The first one is not the most moving or consequential film, but I was entertained for the entire time and I loved seeing Bob Odenkirk playing against type.  I'm excited to see this next one. (****)


AUGUST 29

The Roses


This looks terrible.  It made me want to do a wellness check on the screenwriter (*)

The Toxic Avenger
I know that the original is a cult classic, but it never held any interest for me. (*)

Thoughts?

Monday, April 21, 2025

New Evangelizers Post: Pope Francis and the Life of Faith

                 


I have a new article up at NewEvangelizers.com.  

Like many of you, I awoke this morning to the news that Pope Francis has gone to our Heavenly Father. My heart is very heavy at this loss, as I am sure is the case for all who feel the loss of our shepherd.

There is so much to say about the life of Pope Francis. Like all momentous people in history, people said polarizing things about him. I am convinced that much of the controversies are rooted in the ignorance of a media that does not understand the Catholic faith. Even as I watched the local news, I heard how they mischaracterized his call to bless those with same-sex attractions as a blessing of same-sex unions. This is not at all for our Holy Father said, but that never has stopped people from twisting his intentions.

For the purpose of this article, I wanted to focus on Pope Francis’ call to have a lived experience of faith.

One of my biggest takeaways from his pontificate was his call to be active in the Gospel. He never downplayed the importance of study and private prayer. But all of this needed to be something lived out in the lives of others. He stated that “truth is not an abstract idea, but is Jesus himself, the Word of God in whom is the Life that is the Light of man (cf. Jn1:4), the Son of God who is also the Son of Man.” In other words, theology is not simply the mastery of a subject, but an encounter with Christ Himself.

This requires us to go outside of our bubbles and encounter those that may be different and unfamiliar to us. He must be in dialogue with “other scientific, philosophical, humanistic and artistic knowledge, with believers and non-believers, with men and women of different Christian confessions and different religions.”

When I was younger, we met with a priest about putting on a retreat in his parish. He said he was concerned that we were only “saving the saved.” What he meant was that he worried that we were only focusing on people who already had a relationship with God and not focusing on those who are on the outside of that. While it is essential that we continue to kindle the fire of faith in those who have it, this priest was correct in that we have to reach out to those on the margins. And this is something that Pope Francis constantly emphasized.

As I wrote in last week’s article, Christ came into the world and His basilea (“kingdom”) was built around those who were on the margins of society. Jesus reached out to the prostitutes and the tax collectors. He stood up for the woman caught in adultery. He made care for the poor and the sick an essential part of the Christian message.

Pope Francis always called us to reach out to those on the margins of modern society. He reached out to those who feel alienated from the Church: those with same-sex attractions, the divorced and remarried, the prisoners, the poor, etc. This article is not an analysis of his methodology in this regard. Instead, its purpose is to show that Pope Francis took so seriously the directive of Christ to reach out to the anawim (“the least ones”).

In reaching out to them, he called us to be “an army of forgiveness.” His call for the Jubilee Year of Mercy emphasized this point. Our message to those who feel far from God should always point to the never-ending mercy of the Savior. This does not mean that we affirm anyone in sin. But we also are not called to be their judge. We are called to show them the greatness of God’s mercy by living God’s mercy.

Living mercy means that we have to be active in the life of faith. Pope Francis kept calling people, especially the young, to get more involved and shake things up. In the first year of his pontificate, he said at World Youth Day “”What do I hope for from World Youth Day? I hope for a mess … that the Church takes to the streets. That we defend ourselves from comfort… The Church must be taken into the streets.”

This is a very Apostolic image. In my recent studies of the early Apostles like St. Paul, I was struck by the radical, anti-establishment message that came with the Gospel. The ancient Romans saw Christianity as something disruptive and that still is true today. Pope Francis constantly called us to be roused from our settled complacency, from our feeling that I am a “good enough” Catholic. He challenged us to be radical in our mercy and forgiveness in the world.

You can read the whole article here.




Sunday, April 20, 2025

Alleluia! Christ Is Risen! Easter 2025

     

[repost from 2023]
"Who [indeed] is the victor over the world but the one who believes that Jesus is the Son of God?"


I saw something recently that said that only 39% of Americans thought that religion was very important.  That is down by around 30 percent from years past.  Media, both mainstream and social, are pushing hard for the idea that Christianity is dying.  More and more people are embracing the belief that God is dead.

But, to quote the great GK Chesterton, "I have said that Asia and the ancient world had an air of being too old to die. Christendom has had the very opposite fate. Christendom has had a series of revolutions and in each one of them Christianity has died. Christianity has died many times and risen again; for it had a [G]od who knew the way out of the grave.  "

Today is a day that we remember that death is not the final defeat.  Even though the world may claim victory, that victory is always temporary.  Final victory is with those who stand with Christ.  He is our Final Victory.

It is true that more and more people are extinguishing the light of Christ inside of them.  And some never have that light kindled in the first place.  

I was at the Easter Vigil Mass last night.  It always strikes me how it opens:  the church in complete darkness, but then one candle enters to pierce the dark.  And that one candle of Christ lights all the other candles until the whole place is filled with light.  

In our world, darkness keeps trying to overwhelm us.  But we must remember "The Light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it." (John 1:6)

In fact, it is when things get darker that our light matters most.  When the church lights are turned on, we extinguish our candles because they do not add much.  But when it is dark, our candles mean so much more.  It is the same with our light.  In times of great prosperity and faith, our small acts of faith may not seem all that important.  But as more and more of the world turns away from the Light of the World, our candles need to burn bright.

Today we stand with Christ.  Today we light the flame in our hearts to expel the darkness.

Today we remember that we have victory not because of ourselves, but because Jesus won it for us.

He is Risen.



Alleluia!

Friday, April 18, 2025

Divine Mercy Novena 2025

     

(most of the text below is a repost from 2022)





A reminder that the Divine Mercy Novena begins today (Good Friday) and continues through until Mercy Sunday.  You can find the novena here:


https://www.ewtn.com/catholicism/devotions/novena-13366

This has been a powerful and profound devotion in my life and many graces have come to me through a devotion to Jesus' Divine Mercy.  

Very recently, I experienced such an overwhelmingly powerful act of mercy.  I am acutely aware that under Divine Justice, there is much for which I have to answer.  Each day I seem to be racking up a debt of sin.  But even more concretely, the way I treat the people I claim to love is often selfish and shameful.  When confronted with this reality, I often shrink with shame.  I struggle with this.  I think that God loves me but because of my sins, He doesn't like me very much.  It is an image that is horribly unfair to Our Lord.

Sin is a real barrier between God and us, but God's love is greater than that.  Not too long ago, I had to admit my faults to someone, expecting them to return to me bitter (but just) judgment.  Instead, this person simply smiled at me and told me that all was well.  There was no trace of bitterness or judgment.  There was only pure kindness and love and a joy that I could unburden myself on them.  

This act of mercy lifted a great burden from my heart.  And it acted as a symbol for how God's mercy is similar.

It is a beautiful lay your faults bare to someone and have them look beyond them is a beautiful thing.  Too often I think we define ourselves by our sins.

Pope John Paul II once said that we are more than the sum total of our sins.

God sees us as we are, beyond our sins.  He wants us to come to Him and lay our sins on His mercy.  

I look forward to joining all of you in spiritual communion through this novena.

In these days with all of the worries and struggles that we have, we have a greater need to throw ourselves at the Mercy of God!

Thursday, April 17, 2025

TV Review: The Chosen - The Last Supper

 

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There is a reason that The Chosen is a world-wide phenomenon.  Christian movies and TV shows are a dime-a-dozen.  But creator Dallas Jenkins understands that if you are going to make good Christian art, you must first focus on making good ART.  So many well-intentioned Christian projects fall short because they lack the skill to match their earnest enthusiasm.

That is not the case with The Chosen.  This is especially true about this 5th season, subtitled The Last Supper.

This season focuses on Holy Week, starting with Palm Sunday and going all the way through the Agony in the Garden.  One of the things that struck me as I watched these episodes in the theater was how cinematic it all was.  For a show that is completely crowd-funded, the cinematography is gorgeous.  You get the feeling for the immensity of Jerusalem on this truly epic scale.  At the same time, the lighting and colors highlight the deeply intimate moments of love and heartbreak throughout.  

One of the things that is fascinating about Jenkins and his writers is that they are able to take a story that is the most familiar in all of human history and he is still able to get you on the edge of your seat.  As in past seasons they take liberties and elaborations with the Gospel stories, but it is always done in a way to enhance the depths of the story and the characters.  Even though we all know where things are headed, he makes you feel the tension and the sorrow.  

This season such an intersting framing device.  Each episode begins with a flash forward to the Last Supper and then the rest of the episode is a flashback to earlier in the week.  What makes it more interesting is that Jenkins shows us the Last Supper in reverse chronological order.  The first episode shows us the end, right before they head to Gethsemane and then shows at the end Jesus (Jonathon Roumie) washing their feet.  It had a fascinating effect to watch.  By breaking it down this way, the creators once again force us to see something familiar from a new perspective.  Doing this shakes us from our apathy and throws us into the drama.

There are two particularly powerful moments that are inventions of the show.  The first involves the Hebrew Dayenu prayer.  Traditionally, it is a prayer that remembers the the great things that God has done.  For example, it says "If He had brought us out of Egypt, but not executed justice upon the Egyptians, it would have been enough.  If He had executed justice on the Egyptians, but not upon their gods, it would have been enough..."  And it goes on like this for many stanzas.  In the show, the evening before the Last Supper, Jesus has dinner with his female disciples and they recite their version of the Dayenu that had many people in tears.

A powerful moment occurs in the Agony in the Garden.  To help get us int Jesus' mind, we see that He has visions of Abraham and Isaac, Ezekiel, and one other person.  It was this third person that almost broke me down and was a touching meditation on the vulnerabilty of Christ.

One other elaboration that I was very happy with was the calling of Little James (Jordan Walker Ross) and Thaddeus (Giavani Cairo).  The series began with these two already as Jesus' disciples.  So there was an immense sense of satisfaction to finally see this.

But it is not just the elaborations that are powerful.  Jenkins and his crew are able to bring to life the power and shock of the Gospel stories.  When Jesus cleanses the Temple, you can feel the tension, fear, anger, and outrage of everyone involved.  It is one of the most dramatic and stressful parts of the entire season.

All of the performances are excellent.  This is a cast that has worked together for many years and their chemistry is evident.  Roumie in particular is wonderful.  As the Jesus, he lets us feel all the wide range of human emotions our Savior must have felt, all of them feel honest and profound, but he never loses that sense of Divine grace in his performance.  Besides Roumie, the biggest standout is Elijah Alexander as Atticus Aemilius.  He has such commanding charisma that he seizes your attention every time he is on the screen.  He seems like the master of the world who is in complete control of all the elements around him.  His arrogant humor does not feel like bluster, but a projection of his intelligence and power.  I sincerly hope that his character will have a direct encounter with Jesus next season to see if that cynical shell will crack or harden.

The one thing I am not a big fan of is the portrayal of Pontius Pilate.  Andrew James Allen is doing a fine job in the role.  But the writer portray him as weak and disengaged.  Historically, Pilate was a violent monster who crucified hundreds of men, women, and children.  The writers attempt to balance this with the character of Atticus, who carries this hardened demeanor.  But I would have prefered a more menacing Pilate.

Watching The Chosen has been a moving experience and has shaped my spiritual imagination.  I recommend to everyone who wants to see one of the best pieces of Christian art in years, please check out this past season.

Sunday, April 13, 2025

Palm Sunday 2025

   





Hosanna!
Hosanna!

Hosanna in the Highest!

Blessed is He who comes in the Name of the Lord!

Hosanna in the Highest!

And then 5 days later...

Crucify Him!  Crucify Him!

There are so many things that went into this dramatic change in the crowd.  But one of them was this:

Jesus was not the Messiah they wanted.

The people wanted a Messiah who would take up a sword and kill the Romans so that he could usher in a new empire with the Jewish people at the top of the dominance hierarchy.  This Messiah would deliver them from their enemies through strength and violence.

But Jesus told them to love their enemies, to do good to those that hurt them.

And because He was not the Messiah they wanted, they rejected Him.

This is still a problem today.  Jesus is the answer to the pain, suffering, hatred, and lonliness of the world.  And yet how many do not come to Him?  How empty are our churches as He offers Himself on the altar.  I would venture to say that for many of us, He is not the Messiah we want.

We want a Messiah who will tell us that we don't have to change, that we are good enough just as we are and that everything we are doing is fine.  Sure we could a little extra, but I'm okay and you're okay.

Jesus is not that Messiah.  Yes, He loves us just as we are.  But He loves us enough not to leave us there.  Jesus challenges us to take care of the poor, to reach out to the lost, to give of our time and our lives.  He calls us to empty ourselves, taking the form a slave, because that is what He did for us.

This Holy Week, you will have a choice: will you accept Jesus and His message or will you make this just like any other week, putting Jesus back into the corners of your consciousness.  

This week you will give one of two responses:

"Hosanna" or "Crucify Him."


Thursday, April 10, 2025

Trailer Time - Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning Trailer



We don't get much more story in this trailer than we did in the initial teaser.

What we do get is more glimpses of these death-defying stunts, an overview of all the impossible missions that Ethan Hunt has done, and an overwhelming sense of finality.

Even though the story elements aren't being revealed, this trailer has me even more excited to see this.  Tom Cruise has been playing this character for almost 30 years.  And unlike most franchises, my enjoyment of it has only become greater.  By this time in the series, most movies series start to wane.  But it looks like The Final Reckoning is going to go out on a high note.

Thoughts?

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Rest in Peace, Val Kilmer

 



Val Kilmer was a part of my life longer than I realized.  Growing up, my family got cable television and we were frequent customers of the local video store.  Because of this, I came to know him in the movie Real Genius.



I watched that movie more times than I can count.  It is the story of a brilliant student physicist who seems more interested in practical jokes and partying.  It is a quintessentially 80's movie and I love every part of it.  It was here that I first remember Kilmer's devil-may-care charisma, his sarcastic wit, and his effortless charm.  He could do over-the-top moments ("And now we're cha-chaing") as well as the driest of jokes ("I was just contemplating the immortal words of Socrates who said, 'I drank what?'").

Kilmer came from a divorced home and experienced tragedy early on when his younger, epileptic brother drowned at the age of 16.  Despite this, he developed his talents as an actor and became the youngest person to attend Julliard.  From here he would go on to work on the stage and screen.



Later I would discover some of his other comedic works like Top Secret, a movie so funny that it will still have me in stitches no matter how many times I've seen it.  A year after Real Genius, he played Iceman in Top Gun.  This was perfect casting because you needed someone who could rival Tom Cruise's screen presence.  And even though he technically the antagonist of the piece, Kilmer makes clear in his performance how Iceman is actually more right than he is wrong.  



But for me, my favorite Kilmer performance is that of Madmartigan in Willow.  This movie has a special place in my heart because it came along at a very difficult time in my childhood.  I found such joy in this film and that is no small part due to Kilmer's performance.  His Madmartigan is as good as Harrison Ford's Han Solo: he is a scoundrel with a heart of gold.  To this day, I will try to do his sword tricks when no one is looking.

There are a lot of films of his I have not seen that have been lauded, like his portrayal of Jim Morrison in Oliver Stone's The Doors or Michael Mann's Heat.  He did an excellent job voice-acting Moses in The Prince of Egypt.  And he gives a criminally underappreciated performance as Col John Henry Patterson in The Ghost and the Darkness.  In movies like The Saint, he was able to show off his ability to be a chameleon and utterly transform his person (unfortunately, the movie was not as good as his acting).  And if he had been given a better script, I think his Batman could have made more of an impact on the legacy of the character.



But the performance I think he will be remembered for the most, especially by men, is Doc Holliday in Tombstone.  People may not remember but another film with the same characters came out at the same time called Wyatt Earp.  There, Dennis Quaid gave a fantastic performance as Holliday.  But the reason people don't talk about that as much is because he was overshadowed by Kilmer.  

His Doc Holliday was the embodiment of masculine charm.  He was stoic in his fatal disease, never complaining but always moving forward.  He was smart as a whip, able to win any verbal joust.  I love the look in Kilmer's eyes as he spins around his drinking cup to make fun of the pistoleer Ringo.  He Southern drawl communicated a sophisticated arrogance.  And he dangerous the way men want to be.  This almost never happens to me, but when I was watching the movie for the first time, I was at home by myself playing it on a VCR.  When he showed up and said, "I'm your huckleberry," I literally cheered.  I couldn't help myself.  Every man wants to dangerous enough to make the bad guy quake in his boots the way Holliday did.  And Kilmer made us believe it.

But the best line delivery in the film is simplest.  As Doc is dying from his tuberculosis, someone tells him that he ought to be in bed and asks why he is putting himself through this.  Kilmer's Doc simply says:

"Wyatt Earp is my friend."

Kilmer does not say this with passionate inflection or in a melodramatic tone.  He says it in a tone so plain and firm that it seems to come from some rock bottom truth.  And there is some deep truth that Kilmer touches on in this performance: that you will go to hell and back for your friends for no other reason than they are your friends.  

Kilmer's career took a downward turn after the tumultuous filming of The Island of Dr. Moreau.  He would still get leading roles, but the slowly started to dry up.

His final screen performance may be his most touching, reprising his role as Iceman in Top Gun: Maverick.  As in Tombstone, Kilmer is able to convey the depths of male fellowship in his loyalty to Maverick.  And he is able to do that without the ability to speak (the voice was added later by AI).

He dated several famous Hollywood stars including Cher, Daryl Hannah, and Angelina Jolie.  He married Joanne Whalley with whom he starred in Willow.  The divorced after eight years, but not before having two children: Mercedes and Jack.

He was a lifelong believer in the Christian Science faith, which is why he was reluctant to do things like chemotherapy to help his cancer.  He did advocate for religious rights before Congress, asking for exceptions for beliefs under the Affordable Care Act.

Val Kilmer was a singular talent.  He made an impact on the movies of my life and therefore he has a special place in my memory.  And for that I am grateful.

Eternal rest grant unto him, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon him.  May his soul and all the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.  Amen.

Rest in Peace, Val Kilmer