Paul, Apostle of Christ a well-timed production

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Paul, Apostle of Christ comes from Sony Pictures Entertainment’s Affirm label, an offshoot that has produced such Christian-themed dramas as Heaven is for Real, Soul Surfer and Risen. Less interested in blunt proselytizing than more open-ended explorations of faith and its challenges, Affirm films have gratifyingly avoided the kind of pietistic Sunday-school pageantry that characterizes so many motion pictures of the genre.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 29/03/2018 (2962 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Paul, Apostle of Christ comes from Sony Pictures Entertainment’s Affirm label, an offshoot that has produced such Christian-themed dramas as Heaven is for Real, Soul Surfer and Risen. Less interested in blunt proselytizing than more open-ended explorations of faith and its challenges, Affirm films have gratifyingly avoided the kind of pietistic Sunday-school pageantry that characterizes so many motion pictures of the genre.

Written and directed by Andrew Hyatt, Paul, Apostle of Christ is no exception. A portrait of the titular Christian convert and leader of the early church as he faces imprisonment and martyrdom at the hands of Roman oppressors, this drama benefits from lush production values and first-rate performances from a cast of seasoned actors.

Inspired by the New Testament book Acts of the Apostles, the story focuses on Luke (Jim Caviezel), a Greek physician and colleague of Paul’s in setting up early Christian communities, as he visits his incarcerated friend, desperately recording his final words of wisdom while Nero’s forces torture and murder their brothers and sisters outside the prison gates.

Hyatt includes flashbacks of Paul’s famous conversion, from tormentor of Christians to a believer, while on the road to Damascus. Those sequences are filmed in a milky, filtered light and slow-motion haze. But when the action returns to Rome, the movie becomes far tougher and more intriguing.

Despite Caviezel’s dazzlingly white teeth, the actor is convincing as a man of both reason and belief. James Faulkner brings sonorous authority and deep sensitivity to Paul.

Olivier Martinez plays Paul’s captor, a man whose belief in his own Roman gods is being rattled by the fatal illness of his daughter. But next to Faulkner’s quietly affecting portrayal, the most compelling passages of the film take place in Rome’s embattled Christian quarter, where a frightened and rapidly fraying community is wondering whether to stay and fight or escape to rebuild.

As Aquila and Priscilla, the nominal leaders of the beleaguered insurgents, John Lynch and Joanne Whalley deliver nuanced, fully inhabited performances that resonate with propulsive urgency and zeal.

Paul, Apostle of Christ is clearly well timed with Lenten reflections on sacrifice, service, suffering and responsibility. But it offers an equally relevant — and inspiring — portrayal of principled steadfastness and spiritual integrity in the face of a petty, corrupt and tyrannical leader. In that sense, and appropriately enough, Paul, Apostle of Christ offers both solace and a bracing, even revolutionary, challenge.

James Faulkner, left, and Jim Caviezel. (Columbia Pictures)
James Faulkner, left, and Jim Caviezel. (Columbia Pictures)

— Washington Post

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