The Judas Project
1/2*
out of ****

The
Judas Project is ninety minutes of complete incompetence
- a film completely devoid of talent, inspiration, or originality.
If Pier Pasolini's The
Gospel According to St. Matthew proves that films about
Christ can produce some of the greatest movies ever made, The
Judas Project proves that they can also produce some of the
worst. I normally consider cheap-shot statements to be below the
dignity of a serious film critic, but I can say that this is a
film to be avoided the same way that the plague should be avoided.
I can't think of a single reason why anyone would want to see
it, or should have to. Anyone who claims to have any grounds to
take it seriously is, frankly, wrong, and you should never ask
them their opinion of any movie, ever again.
Where
do I start? Looking over my notes, I feel like an investigative
reporter staring at the world’s worst train wreck. The beginning
is as good as a place as any, I suppose. This is a contemporary
update of the life of Christ, directed, written, produced, scored
(including every last one of those cheesy, god-awful songs) by
a Pentecostal preacher named James H. Barden, who never made another
movie before or since. It follows the basic, familiar plot with
reasonable, if obvious, accuracy. We begin with the betrayal of
Judas (Ramy Zada), with soldiers being replaced with helicopters
and Gethsemane with the top of a building. We are then immediately
given a title card that reads, “Two years earlier.”
Already as I watched, I was beginning to see the red flags flying
up into the air: There is absolutely no narrative reason for the
opening scene to be a flash-forward, and when the scene repeats
later on in its correct sequence, it plays exactly the same. This
is not the only time this happens either; Barden clearly has no
grasp on narrative structure, and he continuously plays and replays
the same scenes over and over again, long after the point has
been made. More on that later.
After
this flash-forward, we indeed jump back to two years earlier,
though the whole film only seems to take place within a week or
so, and funny—all their haircuts and clothes remain the
same throughout the movie. We are introduced to Jesse, the Son
of God, who is certainly not your grandfather’s Christ.
That’s because your grandfather didn’t have to be
subjected to the likes of Jan and Paul Crouch and Trinity Broadcasting
Network—as played by John O’Banion, this Christ looks
and talks and moves just like a late night televangelist, complete
with the weepy eyes, the exaggerated gestures, well-manicured
looks, and the laying on hands (“Receive the spirit!”
he cries, placing his hand on an unsuspecting victim’s forehead).
Because
this is a contemporizing of the Gospels, Christ’s words
have been updated for a new generation as well. He is given some
jaw-dropping lines like, “It’s good to have faith,
but it’s of little use to you unless you believe and have
faith,” and “Every light needs a light switch, and
you will be mine.” These are the lines that I wrote down,
but believe me, they get a lot worse. The result is a Christ who
moves through the film like a money-swindling holy-roller whose
words of wisdom sound more recycled from Kung Fu movies than reimagined
from the Gospels.
Considering
that this film was made and funded by an Evangelical Pentecostal
church, we could possibly dismiss Jesse as their personal, albeit
bias, interpretation of Christ himself. Fair enough, but all
of the other characters in the film act with the exact same
tone and conviction. There is simply not one believable performance
in the film— all the actors are too busy waving their hands
around piously, speaking softly, and keeping their eyes dampened,
as if keenly aware of the sappy music that constantly plays in
the background (which, by my observation, is really just the same
piano lick played over and over again without any variation).
The
writing has a lot to do with this miserable failure of a film.
Along the way, Jesse picks up some disciples, including the brutish
Pete (Ray Holtman) and Judas, and if Jesse’s dialogue is
awful, his disciples’ lines have to be heard to be believed.
Every word they speak is so contrived and obvious that I wanted
to reach into the movie and shake the actors to see if they were
assembled out of bits and pieces of stock characters from other
movies. In particular, Judas might as well be wearing a shirt
that says, “Token Villain.” As he stares into the
heavens, rubs his chin, and mutters, “Oh, the things I could
do with the power that Jesse has,” we realize that all he
is lacking is a mustache to twirl.
Now
that we're on the topic of stock-characters, consider our modern-day
Pharisees and Romans authorities. They watch Jesse preach his
sermons on various beaches (actually, it’s the same beach,
just shot from different angles), and they decide, “This
man could become a world leader.” From his actions and mannerisms,
I am forced to conclude that these men are from Binny Hinn’s
ministry team, and they see Jesse as a vital threat to their monopoly.
Actually, that’s a more thorough explanation than what we
are given (and it would have made a better movie). We never quite
figure out who these guys are—we only know that they were
villains because they all wear dark business suits and meet in
large, nearly-empty rooms, where they convene with all of the
world leaders in tow, who eat from their hands. Why Jesse is a
threat to them no one can say, except that it is needed for the
story to develop. Sure, he can work miracles, but whenever he
does so, everyone simply stands around with their mouths open.
He is clearly not leading a rebellion or turning people against
authority. If the original Christ was a potential political threat,
this Christ is simply the talk-show topic of the week, no different
from any other spiritual medium that you would see on the Sci-Fi
Channel. Why would they feel like they need him on their side,
and, if he refuses, to have him killed?
Well,
he is the Son of God, after all, a point that director
Barden stresses in one of the worst scenes ever filmed. I am referring
to the Transfiguration, in which Jesse reveals his true identity
to his disciples: He leads his disciples up to the top of a mountain,
where they witness a light show that brings to mind Highlander
or Conan the Barbarian, minus the charm that allows us
to forgive the painfully unconvincing special effects. As lights
and lasers swirl around a radiant Jesse, a voice from heaven says,
“This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well-pleased.”
Jesse then smiles, and the disciples look on with their mouths
open, as if they are watching the movie with us and are equally
amazed at its badness. Jesse then asks the disciples who they
think he is, and Pete answers, “You are the Son of God.”
Jesse says, “This was not revealed to you by man, but by
God.” Excuse me, but that was the voice of God? Sounded
to me more like some sort of television announcer, and as the
cartoonish special effects faded away, I almost excepted God to
say, “And we’ll be right back with the adventures
of my Son right after these messages.”
Speaking
of bizarre, distracting voice-overs, I promised that I would get
back to Barden’s overuse of flashbacks. After Jesse’s
death, the final twenty minutes of the film belong to the director’s
own voice, as he sings song after song with lyrics like, “Jesse,
I need you” and “He’s just a man with a band.”
The camera slowly moves to all of the disciples as they weep through
the funeral, and we are given flashbacks from each of their experiences
with Jesse. The problem is that we have seen most of these scenes
already, and Barden pointlessly replays them all again in nearly
as much detail as we saw them the first time. And yes, they’re
just as bad the second time around.
This
leads us to the biggest problem, at least story-wise, with The
Judas Project. Updating the life of Christ to a contemporary
setting is a very inspired idea—one that was well handled
in Godspell.
Christ was a radical in his time, both spiritually and politically,
and certainly many clichés both in and outside of the church
have been built up around his person. To set Jesus in a modern-day
film and have him tackle those clichés is a poignant, powerful
approach. I am reminded of the scene in Godspell when
Christ mourns for New York City with the same words that he did
for Jerusalem in the Gospel of Matthew. Unfortunately, The
Judas Project only updates the story, not the themes. If
you are familiar with the gospels, or if you have seen any other
Jesus movie, or if you have ever read a Christian bumper sticker,
than there will be absolutely no surprises here. Everything happens
exactly the way that it happened in the gospels. Surely the film
could have been bold enough to update something—anything—besides
the location. Surely instead of feeding the multitude with bread
and cheese, Christ could have served fries and ice cream. Surely
he could have been executed with a modern method, like the electric
chair or a hanging. Surely Christ could have assembled together
some type of ethnic minorities among his group of disciples, instead
of just a bunch of dumb white guys. Surely American’s culture
would be rich for a modern-day Jesus to walk among and comment
on. But no—Jesse’s adventures follow the traditional
life of Jesus of a ‘T,’ without any variation. This
is not a contemporary update at all, but a local church’s
passion play minus the costumes. I am not against watching a film
made by Fundamental Christians, but why couldn’t they think
of an original, more refreshing (or at the very least, compelling)
approach to their greatest hero?
As
a consequence of this transfer of most of the Gospel story into
modern day, Christ is still crucified by the greedy, Jewish lawmakers.
Sadly, out of its own, first-century historical context, this
casting simply comes across as racism on James H. Barden’s
part. Recently, many political/spiritual leaders have expressed
their concerns regarding possible anti-Semitism in Mel Gibson’s
The Passion of the Christ, but they really need not
look further than The Judas Project. Here is a film with
an all-white cast of male protagonists, clearly Jewish villains,
and director Barden himself in a cameo as the ghost of a Confederate
general, rising to heaven as one of God’s cherished saints.
The Passion of the Christ as least understood that the
nationality of Christ and his enemies was not the point or the
reason of Christ’s death, merely a historical fact. Barden
maintains the historical nationality of the villains yet transfers
Christ and his disciples into all white men. This casting proves
that the director has no clue of the true nature and relevance
of Christ’s sacrifice; Barden instead focuses merely on
the race and killed him. The result is an act of such bigotry
that I’m surprised this movie wasn’t picketed, except
perhaps that those who objected realized it was so incompetently
made that it was no threat.
There’s
plenty more in this train wreck that I could talk about. I could
linger more on the atrocious acting, or discuss the characters
that react for absolutely no reason, or the syrupy soundtrack
that tries to create emotion instead of support it, or the lingering
shots of mounted cops’ sweaty armpits. But I have dragged
this review on for far too long, writing about a movie that hardly
deserves so many words. Recently, Barden has released The
Judas Project on DVD. He claims it is to reach the world
with its spiritual message, but I speculate that it is to cash
in on the success of Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ.
Whatever the case, do yourself a favor: On my list
of Christ films, there are over a dozen movies that are better
than this one. You have absolutely no reason to watch this pointless
mishmash. In the meantime, if by some freak mishap I don’t
make it to heaven and I have the option of watching this for all
eternity or suffering through eternal flames, I’d probably
pick the latter.
Click
here to to learn about the many cinematic faces of Christ.
Cast:
John O’Banion: Jesse (Jesus)
Ramy Zada: Judas
Ray Holtman: Pete
Gerald Gordon: Jackson
Richard Herd: Cunningham
Jeff Corey: Poneras
R.S. Entertainment presents
a film produced, written, scored, spat on, directed, and sung
by James H. Barden. Rated PG-13, for violence and brief language.
Running time: 90 minutes. Original United States theatrical release
date: Februray 19, 1993 (though made in 1990).