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This week, we take a look at the films of Michael Mann. What's your best Mann?

 • Ali
 • Collateral
 • Heat
 • The Insider
 • The Last of the Mohicans
 • Manhunter
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 • Public Enemies
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HOLIDAYS & EVENTS



Passions and Tears Abound
What moviegoers had to say after watching The Passion of The Christ.
by Agnieszka Tennant | posted 2/27/2004


As the crowds left theaters Wednesday after seeing The Passion of the Christ on the movie's opening night, I noticed three things: ashes on their foreheads, eyelids swollen from crying, and a stunned silence.

"I can't say I enjoyed myself," says Mario Perez, 38, of Plainfield, Illinois, emerging from a sold-out showing in a Chicago suburb.

All 13 people I interviewed at two different theaters felt pretty much the same way. But that's not to say they didn't like the movie. For most, just the opposite was true.

Anita Needham, 38, a Catholic whose forehead was still marked by ashes from an earlier Ash Wednesday service, put it this way: "To see that Jesus died for our sins, it made me feel so good inside. But it hurt my heart. I could leave here happy, but I'm sad at the same time."

Perez, who was baptized last July and joined the church last October, struggled to put his overwhelming emotions into words: "I feel grateful and humbled."

Justin Bardolph, 17, a Reformed Christian from Villa Park, was struck by the power of seeing the Passion as opposed to just reading about it. "I've grown up hearing the story of Jesus, but it's a lot more powerful when you can see it on the screen," he said. "There's only so much you can imagine in your head. When they put the crown of thorns on Jesus' head, and they were hammering it on, you could hear a big, 'Oh!' in the theater."

"It was riveting, amazing, shocking," said Woodstock's Evelyn Blackledge, 49, who described herself as a Pentecostal Christian. She believes every Christian should see the film because it puts earthly pursuits in perspective. "A lot of times we just give to ourselves, pour into ourselves, without being able to sacrifice," she said. "It makes the things that you give up so minute."

Not a popcorn movie

Holding a bucket half-filled with the butter-topped staple diet of moviegoers, Blackledge said that "once the movie started, I don't remember eating any popcorn."

Larry Hau's family didn't even bother with the munchies: "I couldn't see eating popcorn and watching the crucifixion," said Hau, a 42-year-old evangelical from Lombard. Bill Ford, an evangelical Lutheran from Brookfield, sat next to a youth group whose members bought popcorn and pop: "Soon after Christ's suffering started, they stopped eating."

Like many, Blackledge and her 17-year-old daughter had been crying. "I cried through the whole thing," says Madelyn Blackledge. Some were still shedding tears during my interviews. Evangelical Kathy Hau, 46, of Lombard, broke into tears while describing "how they were nailing him to the cross and how he asked God to forgive them. I don't know if I could have done that."

But not all viewers were moved in the same way. Some found the intense violence unnecessary or even gratuitous. An elderly couple was visibly upset, saying only that the film was "brutal" and "it should have never been done." Gloria Martino, a Catholic from Romeoville, said the movie was true to what her Catholic church has taught her, but thought "the beating on the way was just too extreme. I don't know how he could have lived that long when they kept flogging him so much."




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