Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Opus Dei. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Opus Dei. Mostrar todas las entradas

24.8.09

Bringing a Saint’s Life to the Screen (The New York Times)


By Laurie Goodstein

The film director Roland Joffé, who has yet to regain the acclaim he won a generation ago for “The Killing Fields” and “The Mission,” is shooting a movie in Argentina focused on the founder of Opus Dei, an elite and powerful organization within the Roman Catholic Church.

The film, “There Be Dragons,” set during the Spanish Civil War, weaves fictional characters created by Mr. Joffé with the story of St. Josemaría Escrivá de Balaguer, the Spaniard who founded Opus Dei and was canonized by the church.

The project was initiated by a member of Opus Dei, is partly produced and financed by the group’s members and has enlisted an Opus Dei priest to consult on the set. News of the project has set off criticism among some former Opus Dei members that the movie will be little more than propaganda for the organization. But Mr. Joffé, in the first interview he has given about the film, said that he had been given complete creative control and that Opus Dei never had any influence on the project.

He ditched the script he was originally given, he said, because he did not want to make what he called a “biopic” about Escrivá’s life. But, he added, he was intrigued by Escrivá’s ideas about the power of forgiveness and the capacity of every human being for sainthood. Opus Dei — the name is Latin for work of God — teaches that ordinary work can be a path to sanctity if the believer maintains a demanding regimen of religious practices intended to achieve holiness.

“I was very interested in the idea of embarking on a piece of work that took religion seriously on its own terms and didn’t play a game where one approached religion denying its validity,” Mr. Joffé said.

When pressed, he called himself a “wobbly agnostic” but added, “I do believe that rigid atheism is a rather intellectually short-sighted position.”

The Opus Dei members behind the project were delighted to enlist Mr. Joffé, whose reputation was that of a political leftist who made films that asked profound ethical questions.

In the 1980s Mr. Joffé was nominated for Academy Awards as best director for “The Killing Fields,” about the genocidal war in Cambodia, and “The Mission,” about Jesuit missionaries who try to defend a South American tribe from Portuguese slave traders. But his career has sputtered since, with movies like “The Scarlet Letter” and “Captivity,” a horror movie, earning him nominations for the Golden Raspberry Awards, which honor the worst of the film industry.

Mr. Joffé’s portrayal of Escrivá’s actions during the 1930s is likely to be provocative, especially in Europe. Some historians have accused Escrivá of collaborating with Franco. Mr. Joffé said he concluded after doing extensive research that Escrivá had been eager to avoid doing anything that would jeopardize the church’s position in Spain.

“Josemaría himself left Spain, and basically stayed out, and my sense is that he didn’t agree with and didn’t want to get involved in politics at the time,” he said.

Opus Dei has received tremendous publicity in recent years, most of it negative, from “The Da Vinci Code,” the 2003 novel by Dan Brown, and the 2006 movie based on the book. In both, Opus Dei, which claims more than 80,000 priest and lay members worldwide, is portrayed as a murderous cult whose members flog themselves with whips and wear barbed chains around their thighs.

Some members do practice what they call a mild form of “corporal mortification.” But what has made the group even more an object of suspicion is that some of its members do not readily identify themselves as such, and occupy influential positions in business, politics and other professions.

Heriberto Schoeffer, an independent film producer in Los Angeles and a member of Opus Dei, said he first conceived of a film dramatizing the life of Escrivá after reading a book about his escape over the Pyrenees during the Spanish Civil War. “All I wanted is for people to see a good side of him, because so many bad things are said about him and Opus Dei,” Mr. Schoeffer said.

With financing from a friend who is also an Opus Dei member, Mr. Schoeffer contracted a screenwriter, Barbara Nicolosi, a former nun and conservative Catholic who started a training program for Christians in Hollywood. She said in an interview that it took her two years, and three research trips to Spain, to write the script, an “Indiana Jones adventure story about a guy who was motivated by Jesus.”

Mr. Schoeffer said that he showed the script to Hugh Hudson, the director of “Chariots of Fire,” who thought the screenplay “smelled pro-Franco, so he didn’t want to do it,” and then brought it to Alejandro González Iñárritu, the Mexican director whose films include “Babel” and “21 Grams,” who found it too complicated.

Mr. Joffé also turned it down initially, but he said he reconsidered after he saw video of Escrivá answering a question from a Jewish girl who wanted to convert to Catholicism. Escrivá told her that she should not convert, because it would be disrespectful to her parents. “I thought this was so open-minded,” Mr. Joffé said.

In writing the new script, Mr. Joffé came up with a convoluted plot in which a young journalist discovers that his estranged father has a long-buried connection to Escrivá.

To perform research, Mr. Joffé traveled to South America, Spain and Italy. Mr. Schoeffer, who has since left the project, said they met in Rome with two prominent members of Opus Dei: Joaquín Navarro-Valls, who was the Vatican spokesman under Pope John Paul II, and the Rev. John Wauck, a priest who is a professor of literature and communication of the faith at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross, in Rome. (Father Wauck is now the on-set adviser).

The British actor Charlie Cox (“Stardust”) plays Escrivá, and Wes Bentley (“American Beauty”) plays the journalist’s father. The ensemble cast also includes Derek Jacobi and Geraldine Chaplin.

The financing of about $30 million came from about 100 investors, and raising it was a struggle, said Ignacio G. Sancha, the lead producer, a Spanish financier and lawyer who is also a member of Opus Dei.

The film’s backers are not avoiding controversy, and may even be anticipating it. They have hired Paul Lauer, the publicist for Mel Gibson’s “Passion of the Christ,” another religious epic with a no-name cast and a big-name director, which cashed in on all the attention it generated.

27.7.09

"There Be Dragons", de Roland Joffé (fotos del rodaje)

Me pidieron que saque las fotos. Saco las fotos. Lo dejo al criterio de cada uno analizar el asunto...

Se filma hace cuatro semanas en Buenos Aires la controvertida "There Be Dragons", considerada como la película más cara jamás filmada en la Argentina. Dirigida por Roland Joffé y protagonizada por Charlie Cox (a quienes se puede ver conversando en una de las fotos), la película centrada en la vida de José María Escrivá de Balaguer, el fundador de "la obra", incluye en su elenco a Dougray Scott, Wes Bentley y el argentino Lito Cruz (esto es confirmadísimo). Dicen también que actúa la española Belén Rueda, pero eso no lo logré confirmar.

Lo que tampoco se puede confirmar oficialmente, pero cada vez parece más probable (y algunas fuentes dejan entrever que es así), es que buena parte del dinero para financiar la película proviene del propio Opus Dei, que trata así de dar una versión más "amable" de su discutidísima institución, muy criticada desde distintas áreas en sus ocho décadas de existencia. La nota sobre el rodaje sale hoy en "Clarín" (leer y ver las fotos allí).

Lo que ven allí no es otra cosa que la esquina de Caseros y Defensa, en San Telmo (o Barracas, elijan), a unas pocas cuadras de la redacción del diario. Allí están filmando hace unos cuántos días y, como verán los que conocen la zona, han transformado Caseros en una calle de tierra y cambiado la fachada de varios edificios.

Más allá de la información, yo sigo sin entender cómo se filma una película del Opus Dei en Buenos Aires y el INCAA --tan "comprometido", manejado por gente que en los años '70 estaba ubicada en el polo opuesto de esa institución-- hace "la vista gorda" y apoya institucionalmente una película así. No digo que hay que censurarla ni mucho menos, pero al menos me interesaría que se investigue un poco de donde viene el dinero para hacerla.

13.6.09

La película del Opus Dei (Segunda Parte)


Rumores, rumores, cosas que se dicen por ahí y que me comentan desde que publiqué el asunto del rodaje de la película de Roland Joffé. ¿Seré yo medio paranoico o es un tema que a la gente incomoda y todos hablan... como por lo bajo?

Cosas que escuché y que pueden o no ser ciertas.

-La película tiene un presupuesto de 20 millones de dólares y buena parte del dinero sale del propio Opus Dei.

-El tal Joffé, pese a su juventud "revolucionaria" sería miembro de La Obra.

-Un conocido actor español rechazó el papel --pese a que le ofrecían un sueldo que jamás había cobrado-- tras leer el guión y ver de que iba la peli. Otro actor español (menos conocido y seguramente más necesitado de un buen salario), lo aceptó.

-La película tiene aprobación del Opus Dei.

-Muchas escenas que en la ficción transcurren en España se filmarán aqui, en la provincia de Buenos Aires.

-Las productoras argentinas que ofrecen servicios de producción (son dos) estarían cobrando una cantidad de dinero lo suficientemente importante como para "hacer la vista gorda" y participar en una película de este tipo.

-Hasta ahora ninguno de estos "rumores" fueron desmentidos por nadie. A lo sumo, un "no sabía que era tan pro Opus Dei" o cosas asi...

Continuará...

8.6.09

¿La película del Opus Dei se filma en la Argentina?


Me enteré de este proyecto el año pasado cuando estaba haciendo una nota sobre rodajes extranjeros en la Argentina y se mencionaba a "There Be Dragons" como una posibilidad. No volví a escuchar el tema hasta que el otro día me enteré en el diario que estaban por hacer la película. Si bien siempre supe que era sobre el Opus Dei, por algún motivo me supuse que sería controversial, crítica o algo por el estilo. Pues parece que no, que la película fue aprobada por el Opus Dei y que sería algo así como una biografía bastante oficial de Escriva de Balaguer.

Me cuesta creerlo. Me cuesta creerlo de parte de Joffe, no porque lo considere un gran cineasta sino por la temática de algunas sus películas anteriores (en su entrada de Wikipedia dicen que fue puesto en "listas negras" en los 70 por el servicio secreto inglés MI5 por sus "opiniones de izquierda"). Y me cuesta creer que haya gente involucrada en la producción desde la Argentina sosteniendo un proyecto así. Si bien ofrecer "servicios de producción" es una forma de ganar dinero --y el rodaje de producciones internacionales en la Argentina está bajando mucho-- y no implica necesariamente una participación en la parte "creativa", el hecho de trabajar en una película de este tipo me parece un poquito repulsivo. ¿El INCAA kirchnerista dará también su apoyo a un filme aprobado por el Opus Dei?

Aquí les dejo una nota del diario inglés The Independent (el diario más "progresista" de Inglaterra) sobre "There Be Dragons".

"Opus Dei lets film director in on some if its secrets"

By Elisabeth Nash

The British film-maker Roland Joffe, who made his mark with his religious drama The Mission about crusading Jesuits in the Brazilian jungle, is to tackle an even more controversial chapter in the history of Catholicism: Opus Dei. Joffe is to recreate the life and miracles of Jose Maria Escriva de Balaguer, the Spanish priest who founded one of the most influential and secretive organisations within the Catholic church, and was canonised in 2002. The film seems set to stir up more controversy, following in the wake of several screen hits tapping into public fascination with tales of Opus-inspired crimes and conspiracies, which have set Vatican chasubles aflap.

The Opus furiously condemned the blockbusting Da Vinci Code in 2006, and its sequel Angels and Demons currently topping the bestseller lists. Opus members were banned from seeing or talking about Javier Fesser's award-winning Camino, 2008, about the cult of suffering. By contrast, Joffe's There be Dragons has received Opus Dei's blessing. "The film team asked us for help in gathering information and we gave them access to the documentation. That's the beginning and end of our collaboration with this film," says Luis Gordon, Opus Dei's former information officer. Mr Gordon said he was reserving judgment on the project's merits. The organisation denies reports that it was providing funds.

The plot starts from the present day, when a young London journalist decides to visit his estranged father who is dying in Spain, and mend fences. By chance the young man investigates one of his father's old friends, a priest, now dead, who is a candidate for sainthood.

The action zigzags through the violence and hatred of Spain's Civil War and crosses the Pyrenees to France, as the journalist uncovers the complex friendship that bonded the two men from childhood. Production notes in El Pais newspaper describe the film as "a drama full of passion, betrayal, love and religion... [it] reveals the importance and eternal power of forgiveness".

The Argentine-Spanish-US co-production will be shot over coming months at the pilgrimage site of Lujan in Argentina, and in Spain. The feature will star British actor Charlie Cox, who has worked in Spain with the director, Vicente Aranda.

The film focuses on the early years of Escriva's life during the 1930s, prompting concern that his rise during the Franco years may be brushed over. "This is a propaganda film written and supervised by members of Opus Dei in a desperate attempt to clean up its battered image in the eyes of public opinion," says an anti-Opus blog of former members who say they were "mentally and spiritually diminished" by the organisation.

The Escriva project circulated among Spanish film-makers for some time, stymied by the inability to find an actor for the leading role. Colin Farrell and the Argentine Juan Diego Botto are among those who had the script pass through their hands.

Jose Maria Escriva de Balaguer was born in north east Spain in 1902, son of an Aragonese shopkeeper. He studied for the priesthood and moved to Madrid where, in 1928, he founded Opus Dei, a secretive organisation that urged the individual to pursue sanctity through their work and daily life. It became influential during Franco's dictatorship and still retains support among members of Spain's political and economic establishment. Members are reluctant to declare themselves, or their medieval practices.

When Escriva died in Rome in 1975 bishops worldwide clamoured for him to be canonised, which he was in October 2002 by Pope John Paul II in St Peters in Rome. Roland Joffe has long wanted to make a film about Escriva. It was one of this "big projects", he said, along with a movie about the life of the spy Mata Hari.

Prayer and punishment: What is Opus Dei?

*Accused of being secretive, manipulative and fundamentalist, Opus Dei is perhaps the most controversial organisation in the Catholic Church, with critics calling it the "Holy Mafia". The group, whose name is Latin for "Work of God", has around 87,000 members across the world, around 70 per cent of whom are "supernumeraries", who are mainly married male or female professionals.

*There are also numeraries and associates who practice celibacy. The former normally live in communities known as "centres of Opus Dei". Some take part in self-mortification with a lash once a week or through wearing a spiked chain around the thigh for several hours a day. To outsiders, this aspect of physical self-punishment is one of the most baffling.

*To join Opus Dei for life, members have to go through a preparation lasting over five years. Members are also required to donate a proportion of their earnings. The movement does not publish its general accounts and questions surround the wealth of the organisation. The Labour MP Ruth Kelly confirmed last year that she is a member.