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  • Terry Lawson: 'Code' review touches a nerve

    Detroit Free Press, MI
    May 28 2006

    TERRY LAWSON: 'Code' review touches a nerve

    May 28, 2006

    Email this Print this BY TERRY LAWSON

    FREE PRESS COLUMNIST
    By Tuesday, I had received 14 letters addressing my review of "The Da
    Vinci Code." Now, before you start forming the words, "Fourteen? Big
    deal," on your coffee-stained lips, read the sentence again: The key
    word here is "letters."

    I had dozens more e-mails, some of them composed by people who had
    seen the movie. But letters? Journalists these days approach anything
    posted by U.S. mail -- unless it's a rebate or a free magazine --
    with a grimace. We figure it will fall into one of four categories:
    prisoners or institutionalized people who seek our help in correcting
    a horrid injustice; readers who play gotcha with writers or our copy
    desks on grammatical or spelling errors; anonymous cranks who just
    hate us, or elderly people who do not and never will go near a
    computer keyboard.

    Though not all the readers gave their ages, these 14 paper relics of
    ancient times appeared to be the product of the last category.
    Although only one said it plainly and uncoded, the message was
    simple: I will rot in hell.

    This might be the case, but I seriously doubt it will be for jumping
    on the Catholic Church, which is what rankled my correspondents.

    Like most of my fellow worshipers at the golden calf called the
    movies, I thought "Da Vinci" and its so-called historical conclusions
    were hooey.

    Yet I can certainly understand why people were upset enough to take
    to quill and papyrus. If it's not exactly open season on Catholics,
    true believers are seeing the church's iconography used in some
    pretty kinky ways these days.

    Madonna may be 47 and a contented cabalist, but that doesn't mean
    she's forgotten how subverting Catholic symbols translates to
    publicity. She's fastening herself to a big mirrored cross to sing
    "Live to Tell" in her current Confessions tour.

    She checked in with her own house organ, the New York Daily News,
    last week to defend herself: "I don't think Jesus would be mad at
    me," she said. Of course not, Madge; he's Jesus. He has to forgive
    you, not only for that "Sex" book but for "Shanghai Surprise." But
    why should we be surprised if some of his followers on Earth hold a
    grudge?

    Meanwhile, on 6-6-06, a remake of the 1976 thriller "The Omen" comes
    around, and seeing it last week at a screening, I realized I had
    forgotten that secretive Catholics were to blame for covering up the
    fact that the Antichrist had been unleashed on the world. I didn't
    recall there being an enormous stink about this at the time; maybe
    the Church was too busy explaining why it still occasionally approved
    the ancient ritual at the heart of the 1973 smash hit "The Exorcist."

    Yet a little research reveals the original "Omen" did have Catholic
    critics complaining that the film was a Protestant attack on
    Catholicism. The Anglican hero was played by Gregory Peck, who had
    Catholic Armenian roots. In the new film, the character is played by
    Liev Schreiber, whose mother was Jewish.

    Not that I would want to start anything, but you know, the Jews do
    control Hollywood, at least when they're not going to cabala lectures
    or (Hindu) yoga class or mocking evangelicals. The days when
    distortion and prejudice could be explained away with "Hey, it's only
    a movie" are gone forever, and while postage stamps may not be far
    behind, the Internet seems custom-made -- intelligently designed? --
    for outrage and activism.

    God may work in mysterious ways, but organized religions work the
    media. Remember Kevin Smith's plan to call his "Clerks" sequel "The
    Passion of the Clerks"? Put down those pens: It now has the secular
    title "Clerks II."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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