THE YOUNG MESSIAH
Director : Cyrus NowrastehCast : Adam Greaves-Neal, Sara Lazzaro, Vincent Walsh, Christian McKay, Sean Bean, David Bradley, Jonathan Bailey, Rory Keenan
Genre : Drama/Biblical
Run Time : 111 mins
Opens : 24 March 2016
Rating : PG (Some Violence)
The Bible doesn’t give us many
details about Jesus’ childhood. We jump from the Nativity to Jesus at age 12
speaking to the temple elders and then skip to Him at age 30. This Biblical
drama attempts to offer a glimpse into the life of the Holy Family, with young
Jesus at its centre.
Our
story finds Jesus (Greaves-Neal) at seven years of age. He has lived in
Alexandria, Egypt with his parents Joseph (Walsh) and Mary (Lazzaro) since they
fled Israel, when King Herod the Great decreed that all boys aged under two be
slaughtered. Acting on a vision he has received, Joseph takes Mary and Jesus
back to Nazareth. The family unit also includes Jesus’ cousin/adopted brother
James (Finn Ireland), Joseph’s brother Cleopas (McKay) and Cleopas’ wife Miriam
(Agni Scott). The new king, Herod the Great’s son Herod Antipas (Bailey),
charges Roman centurion Severus (Bean) with tracking down and killing the young
Jesus, after hearing rumours of a boy performing miracles. In treacherous
times, the Young Messiah must come to grips with the truth about why He is on
this earth.
The Young Messiah is based on the novel Christ the
Lord: Out of Egypt, by Anne Rice. Rice, known for her vampire novels, has
had a fascinating personal journey, having been raised Roman Catholic, leaving
the religion at age 18, returning to Catholicism in 1998, then distancing
herself from Christianity at large in 2010, expressing her grievances with the
state of organised Christianity. Unfortunately, The Young Messiah is not quite as interesting a story, and it’s
easy to see why the filmmakers were boxed in. First, there’s the fact that the
Holy Family is revered by large numbers, and their depiction cannot offend the
sensibilities of the faithful. Second, there’s the “prequel trap” – we already
know where Jesus ends up, so it will take a fair bit to get us invested in this
story set earlier in His life. Working within these boundaries, the tale can’t
help but feel stifled and slow at times.
The Young Messiah is directed by Cyrus Nowrasteh, an American filmmaker of Persian
descent. He adapted Rice’s novel into a screenplay alongside his wife Betsy
Giffen Nowrasteh. Nowrasteh’s work has attracted controversy in the past; he
wrote the docu-drama miniseries The Path
to 9/11 alongside his wife and also wrote and directed The Stoning of Soraya M., about the human rights crisis in Iran.
Being
released around Easter and marketed to believers, The Young Messiah is very tame by comparison. There is a valiant
effort made to humanise the Holy Family without committing blasphemy, and the
anguish experienced by Joseph and Mary as they make sense of how to bring up
God incarnate does have some emotional resonance. The family dynamics get
fleshed out to a satisfactory degree, even if nothing quite riveting comes of
it. Considerable stakes are established, but because we know it’s not Jesus’
time to die yet, none of them actually take hold. The way Mary and Joseph talk
about Jesus’ abilities in hushed tones, it seems like a bald guy in a chrome
wheelchair will show up at any moment to whisk Jesus to a school for gifted
youngsters.
Portraying
Jesus Christ, a widely-worshipped religious figure, is a challenge for any
actor, seeing as how different theologians and believers at large view Him
differently. Portraying Jesus as a child has its own set of challenges on top
of that. How human is too human? How “wise beyond His years” is too much? What
should Jesus’ level of awareness of His divinity be exactly? Should the young
Jesus be innocent and filled with hope, or already world-weary and burdened
with His destiny? For Greaves-Neal, known to Sherlock fans as the pageboy Archie from The Sign of Three, it’s all too much to parse. He seems unable to
eloquently package this into a performance, so unfortunately, Greaves-Neal
often comes off as awkwardly stilted.
Walsh’s
Joseph is as sturdy and reliable as the furniture he builds and Lazarro finds
an adequate blend of maternal warmth and youthful vulnerability as Mary. McKay provides
some much-needed levity as the comic relief uncle without causing too jarring a
tonal shift. Bean is the biggest name by far here and seems reluctant to be
present, trundling through his part as the designated antagonist. When Herod
Antipas is berating Severus for failing in his mission on the first try, Bean
mutters “yes, my lord, I understand. It’s difficult,” with a laughable
flatness. Bailey’s flamboyant, fey portrayal of Herod Antipas is silly rather
than threatening. Keenan’s character, credited as “the Demon”, can only be seen
by Jesus, wears eyeliner and a black cloak and is first seen crunching on an
apple. Subtle.
The
production values are passable – the film was shot on location in Matera,
Italy, which has doubled for ancient Israel in numerous Biblical movies before.
By focusing on Jesus at age seven, The
Young Messiah treads ground that has not been covered countless times in earlier
Biblical productions. It should play relatively well to faithful audiences,
depending on one’s specific beliefs – for example, there are some who hold to
the idea that Jesus did not perform miracles prior to turning the water into
wine at the wedding of Cana, and here we see the young Jesus work wonders long
before that incident. There is a “preaching to the choir” quotient here, if not
as overwhelmingly as in other faith-based films, but it’s unlikely to result in
mass conversions in the cinema.
Summary: The Young
Messiah has to play by established
rules and thus cannot take any significant risks in its portrayal of Jesus’
childhood. It’s almost moving at times, but clunky at others.
RATING: 2.5
out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
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