Episode Transcript
On the Bechdelcast, the questions ask if movies have women and them, are all their discussions just boyfriends and husbands, or do they have individualism?
The patriarchy zephynbast start changing with the Bechdelcast.
Speaker 2Jamie and Caitlin here, we're going on tour, and we're not going on tour just anywhere.
We're going on tour in the Midwest and soon covering the Star Wars prequels.
We're gonna just cover all three at once.
You know it's gonna be fine.
There's been so much talk about the prequels over the years, often on podcasts we really like, often by writers we really like, but never from an intersectional feminist perspective.
And so we're going on this tour to quickly realize why that is.
Speaker 3So you can see us discuss all three prequels in one show in fabulous outfits, in wonderful coseplay.
You don't want to miss this.
We will be in Indianapolis for Let's Fest on Saturday, August thirtieth for a matinee show and then Jamie, you have a solo show that evening that can't be missed.
Speaker 2Called Jamie Loftus and her pet rock solve the world's problems in which that will happen.
Speaker 3I can't wait.
Speaker 2Then the very next day, we are going to Chicago.
You asked, we listened.
We will be at the Den Theater on August thirty.
First, that show is going to start around seven, seven to fifteen pm.
It's an evening show, a sexy little evening show.
We're so excited to go to Chicago and the Den Theater is so beautiful, so Chicagoans do not miss it.
Speaker 3And then then we will be in Madison, Wisconsin on Thursday, September fourth.
I believe that's a seven thirty show, and oh, we're so excited to be in Madison.
Speaker 2And then finally we will be ending the tour in Minneapolis, Minnesota at the Dudley Riggs Theater on Sunday, September seventh.
That is another evening show.
It starts at seven o'clock.
So if you have been one of the many people asking us to come to your town for the last ten years we're doing it, we would love to see you.
The shows are super fun.
As we've said, if you're a matron, specifically, if you're a member of our Patroon aka Matreon.
You get a free little gift at the merch table when you come to say hi after the show.
It's a blast, It's gonna be a super good time.
We love Siena.
You can get all tickets at link tree, slash Bectel cast exqueeze me, We'll see you there.
Speaker 3Enjoy the episode.
Cast Jamie christ superstart.
Happy birthday, Jamie.
Speaker 2Thank you.
Wow, I'm feeling so christ Like today.
I'm feeling I'm feeling like I'm gonna like do unto others.
That's kind of the vibe for today.
I know that that's OK.
He didn't say that, right, I don't know.
Speaker 3That's just the golden rule, which.
Speaker 2I feel like, I feel like, you know, I'm sure he'd agree.
Yeah, I'm sure he wouldn't be like, no, nor do not do unto others?
Okay, Welcome to my birthday.
Welcome to my birthday.
Speaker 3Happy to be here.
Speaker 2I'm happy to be here too.
I think maybe I will actually succeed in going to Knotsberry Farm on my birthday this year.
We'll see I failed last year, but maybe this is the year.
Speaker 3Can I invite myself?
Yeah?
Speaker 2Because you're a season pass holder, right, Yeah?
Yeah, if we are successful in going, Yeah, we should go with a damn group because I haven't been in three years.
Speaker 3I think it's my new favorite theme park.
Speaker 2It's so fun.
It's so fun because the theming is just like, sure, yeah, why not?
I walk around and you're like, hmmm, old timey ghost why not?
Speaker 3Of course?
Speaker 2I love it.
Speaker 3I love it.
Speaker 2Welcome.
Okay, so this is my main feed birthday episode.
So if this is your first episode Wild points of Entry, but for what it's worth, Welcome to the Bechdel Cast.
My name is Jamie, it's my birthday.
Speaker 3My name is Caitlin.
It's not my birthday.
Speaker 2Brutal, brutal, and that must be hard for you today.
Speaker 3Yeah what if I judas you because I'm resentful that it's not my birthday.
Speaker 2Well, then you would be low key the coolest character in the movie Superstar.
It's really I will say, Jesus Christ Superstar a very flawed movie.
Will be talking about it a lot today.
But I feel like the movie is basically like say what you will about Judas, but he kind of is like the best.
I feel like this movie is like pro Judas.
Speaker 3I mean, this might be blasphemous.
Speaker 2Judas had a point.
Speaker 3I was rooting for Judas much more than I was rooting for Jesus in the context of this movie.
Speaker 2Yes, yes, no, like literally, okay, there's so much Okay, Jesus Christ Superstar.
Oh okay, this is the Bechdel Cast.
This is are intersectional feminist movie podcast, which there actually is a lot to talk about because we're sort of talking about Christianity and Judaism writ large.
There's so much to talk about today.
So if you don't know what the Bexwel test is, look it up.
You know what.
I'm not your I'm not your fucking mom.
It's my birthday.
Yeah, okay.
Does the Bible pass the Bexels test?
I would wager not, But let's google it.
Oh, let's google it.
Oh that's actually a really good, annoying question.
Speaker 3I bet it kind of does.
Speaker 2But it's a long book.
Speaker 3Hopefully, I would say the Bible is not a feminist text.
Speaker 2Certainly not, certainly not.
Okay, I'm not the first Oh okay, the Bible barely passes the Bechdel test, so it gets a barely pass.
To be fair, this is Google AI that you can't turn off, so it could be wildly incorrect and just melted an ice cube.
While the Book of Ruth is often cited as a clear example, other books like Exodus, Mark and Luke are also mentioned as containing conversations between women about something other than a man.
However, many argue that these instances are sparse and often involve women talking to men or the topic of conversation indirectly relates to men.
So I would say, maybe it doesn't pass.
This is we've had this.
How many times have we had this conversation where it's like, well, they don't name a man, but a man is implied, but we're talking about the ramifications of a man's actions.
So yeah, let's right at the top.
Does the Bible pass the backseel test?
Maybe technically, but spiritually no.
Speaker 3Spiritually no, I would say.
Speaker 2Spiritually no.
And if that's a hot take to you, I don't know, turn the show off, turn the show off.
I don't know what to tell you.
Okay, let's just get into it, because this is a text.
This is a text.
There is so much going on with Jesus Christ Superstar that I almost regret choosing it.
But I do think this is like my last I think because I was going through the list of all of our episodes from the last decade, and I think that this is the last movie that, like really heavily imprinted on me as a kid that we haven't covered.
So it's necessary.
But I'm curious, Caitlin, what is your history with Jesus Christ Superstar.
Speaker 3Well, I saw this movie like many during the Great Caitlin movie binge of two thousand and five.
Speaker 2And that's interesting that it made the cut.
Honestly, I feel like this movie doesn't have a huge footprint outside of like Sunday School, I know, but.
Speaker 3Yeah, somehow it made the list.
I think it was just referenced enough that I was like, I guess I should see it.
Speaker 2I mean, and Norman Jewison's a big director.
I get it.
Speaker 3Yeah, So I took it upon myself to watch it and Jamie, I know it's your birthday, so I want to be kind and gentle.
But I would say this movie appeals to absolutely zero of my sensibilities and I don't like it at all.
Speaker 2It's definitely not your kind of movie.
It unfortunately is my exact kind of movie.
There's just extraneous dance numbers.
It doesn't really make sense.
Speaker 3It's loud, it's hard to follow.
The songs are not catchy, they're just very repetitive.
I don't like Jesus's voice that.
Speaker 2I thoroughly agree with that Ted Neely, I just like, I don't know.
I mean, I know that that's me five D chessing, being like they made Jesus unlikable so that you would root for Judas.
But I do think it's a skill issue, unfortunately, and it's too bad because it seems like Ted Neely is like from what I had learned about him, he seems like a lovely person whatever, whatever, which you can't say for everyone involved, because let's not forget this was baby Andrew Lloyd Weber's little like Money project, and he did, in fact, just steal the Batman theme.
This movie is so fun, Okay, can I can I get into my history?
Speaker 3Yes?
Please?
Speaker 2This movie is I'm not gonna say it's good.
Although I don't think it's bad.
I think it is deeply, deeply, deeply flawed.
I think and I could be talked out of this.
I do think that this movie and this musical in general, has its heart in the right place.
I think that it was There are many elements of it that are subversive in a good way, and many elements of it that are subversive in a counterproductive and sometimes just straight up confusing way.
But I saw this movie for the first time when I was I think in fifth grade, because I feel like we've like talked about our respective histories with religion, but like my family was all over the place, like I was baptized Catholic, but then we were kind of like, no, it's too dark in those churches, and so we stopped.
And then I went to for a good chunk of my youth, except for when we were briefly into Wickedism.
We went to like a I think technically Protestant but a congregational church, which is basically the shorthand of saying it was the only church in my city that was friendly to queer people, and so it was I mean, I will say, like, I feel lucky that I don't have a ton of like religious trauma or baggage in my life because my church was like relatively loosey, goosey and friendly, which you can tell because they showed this to me in instead of like walking us through the Crucifixion story, they literally turned this movie on and they're like, so that is basically what happened, and we were all like, oh, oh, so this musical is very important to me.
It also was a big musical for my mom.
She it was her like vacuuming music.
Oh, for all of my childhood.
So we like we were in Andrew Lloyd Webber household.
We listened to a lot of Phantom, a lot of Jac's Superstar.
We skipped over Cats for some reason.
That was where the line was drawn.
But yeah, I deeply loved this movie.
And Carl Anderson as Judas was one of the biggest, most formative crushes of my life.
Okay, I was obsessed with him, and I was really sad he died in two thousand and two, which was shortly after I learned he existed.
It really so whatever grade I was in in two thousand and one, I was like, Wow, he's my crush.
We're going to make it work, even though he's seventy or whatever, even though he could be my peepot, We're going to make it work.
And then he died.
But I still think it's like one of my Like, Carl Anderson is Judas, and there's a lot of stuff going on here, but like It's still one of my favorite performances to watch, I think ever, which is very nostalgia field, but it's also like he's so good.
I just think he's so amazing.
A lot of this is Carl Anderson Fueld, And then you go back to the original Broadway cast and Judas.
I mean this also Ted Neely in the original Broadway cast, which again mistake, but you had Ben Vereen as the original Judas.
So like, no matter who, like, Judas is the best character, and I feel like the musical knows that because he's Jesus has exactly one good song, and that's a problem.
In Jesus Christ Superstar, he has one good song.
Speaker 3What do you classify as his one good song?
Speaker 2So I'm gonna I'm gonna say it's it's a skip for me, But fans of Jesus Christ Superstar do like, oh, I'm gonna say this so wrong because because also I would say that Jesus Christ Superstar is probably like I did research for this to see what the interpretation is, but for a long time I was just like, this is a documentary and everything I know about the last days of Jesus' life, like it's in this documentary that I watched Gissemine the song where he's like, what should I that song?
Speaker 3Oh, that's the name of the garden?
I think where they are the Last Supper.
Speaker 2Yeah, so that song.
I get why people like it.
I still am like, it's I just Ted Neely's voice.
I find so grading, unfortunately, but like Carl Anderson's Got Heaven, he's got the opener and the closer of the movie.
So you know, I don't know if there's anyone who's ever argued that this movie is overtly anti Judas, but I like, Judas has the first and the last song, and they're both doing laps around any of Jesus's songs.
Mary Magdalen, both of her songs are better than Jesus.
Any of Jesus's songs the villains have better.
I mean, the villains usually have better songs, but like you're gonna tell me Jesus has a better song than King Herod, And where do we even start with that?
Speaker 3Okay, King Herod's song is my favorite.
Speaker 2It is so like you're like, is it homophobic?
Probably?
But is it iconic?
Definitely?
Like I don't understand, Like I don't know what they were doing there, and the best part is Joshua Mistelle, who is Zero Mistelle's son.
So Broadway Netbo.
Speaker 3Baby, they don't know who those people are on.
Speaker 2Okay, let me take well.
It is actually important because Joshua Mustelle is the child of Zero Mistyle, who both originated Tevia and Fiddler on the Roof on Broadway and also originated Max bialis Stock or no, he played Max Bialistock in the original mel Brooks Producers.
So he is both an iconic Jewish actor and he was like blacklisted in the fifties.
Like he's an interesting guy, and josh Mistell is his son and whatever, he's the NEPO baby that's who plays Harod King Herron.
Speaker 3Ok.
Speaker 2Yeah, and Joshua Mistell is straight.
But but I don't know.
It was so weird.
I was like watching because he's still alive and has given interviews about it, and many times he's been asked like, what what was that all about?
And he, to his credit, is like, I'm not really sure.
I don't know.
I don't know, and I cannot speak on behalf of the queer community.
But I like it.
I don't know, I don't know.
I like it.
It's so good.
And like, would I remove that number.
I can't say that I would.
I look forward to it every time.
Yeah, but like why is it why?
I mean, why is anything like anything in this movie?
Speaker 3That's an excellent question.
Why are the like high priests dressed the way they are with a big deal?
Speaker 2Well, I can so that.
Okay, we're just getting right into it.
That is.
I wasn't aware of this, but I was looking into like because I assumed that this movie was considered like blasphemous by just about everybody when it came out, because I was like, Jesus isn't supposed to be groovy or whatever, And it wasn't as controversial as I thought it would be.
It was a little more well like openly embraced.
But there were elements of it.
And this gets into the fact that we'll talk about this that this movie was shot mostly in Palestine and majority in the West Bank, but the Israeli government has its fingerprints all over it in terms of the permits required to shoot the movie.
Speaker 3They also, I believe, provided some of the funding for the production.
It seems that way Yes offered a rebate and then the director was like, wow, thank you so much.
Israel yes for doing that for us, and hey, other Hollywood directors, you should go shoot your film in Israel and like just like this glowing endorsement of this illegal settler colonial ethno.
Speaker 2State, which is particularly ridiculous when you consider it the majority of the movie was filmed in the fucking West Bank, Like it's yeah, that's I mean, we'll talk about the production of this movie because it's deeply fucked and in some converts of this movie to this day, the word Palestine will not show up in life, like where was this movie shot?
Because there's a lot of and this is you know, out of the control of the production at this point because it was fifty years ago.
But there are still Zionist publications or Zionist sympathizing publications that will say this movie was completely shot in Israel, with you know, completely, no just nothing, no no acknowledgment of where this movie actually was shot and what the history it is, which, of course, considering what this movie is ostensibly about, is pretty fucking ridiculous.
Where occupation is referenced constantly, Yes, so we'll get into that, but oh, I forgot where I was going with that originally.
But but yeah, I mean this this musical is I mean deeply, deeply, deeply a product of its time, and I yeah, there was.
I'm sorry, it was a very difficult one to prep for.
You know, obviously, I mean hopefully if you're a listener of this show, you're well aware of this already.
But you know, any of this movie or productions ties with Israel or any pro Israel rhetoric surrounding this movie is obviously horseshit.
I yeah, but before prepping for this, I feel like it's a two prong thing, or it was in my prep where it was like trying to get to the bottom of how is this movie produced and how is it produced like you're saying, Caitlin like in cooperation and actually directly endorsed with Israel.
Oh that was what I was going to say earlier.
Is that later on Israel kind of disavowed this movie, which who fucking cares?
But I will say that the thing that and again, like listeners, let me know if I'm off base here, but one of the things in this movie that does genuinely seem to be anti Semitic is that costume choice you were talking about with the high priests, because those are Jewish high priests that and again I am not an expert on literally any element of this because I watched it as a documentary as a kid.
But but that there are a lot of Jewish communities that were sort of turned like, uh, what's the word I'm looking for, monocultured, caricaturized maybe exactly like the characters of Caiaphas and Honest have been criticized as being overtly anti Semitic, and from what I could tell that that does appear to definitely be true where they were just like, oh, every Jewish community is the same, and we're gonna, you know, just sort of create these vague villains who are based on historical people.
But for the for the movie is just like it really leans into I think a pretty anti Semitic place.
So it's there's just there's just there's a lot.
It's a lot.
It's a lot.
Yeah, So will you tell me the story of Jesus came?
Speaker 3I sure will.
I know so much about it.
Let's take a quick break first, and then we'll come back for the recap.
Speaker 2And we're back.
Speaker 3So here's the recap.
If it sounds like I'm talking about the events of this famous Jesus story is if I don't really know what I'm talking about or who any of these people are, or if it sounds like I've never read the Bible or been to a Christian church.
Speaker 2People are gonna be so shit.
It's because that has never read the Bible?
How have we not read the Bible?
I tried to do a little bit of backgrounded, like how Lucy Goosey is this adaptation.
I'll do my best, but yeah, ultimately, neither of us are religious, so this is going to be a challenge, yes.
Speaker 3And also again, the movie's kind of hard to follow, especially in the sense that characters will just suddenly show up on screen and they're not really introduced and you don't know who they are in the context of the rest of the narrative, and you're just.
Speaker 2Like, I think, who is that?
I think that this movie?
That's I think that that's like a part of this movie's agenda is that it is assumed that everyone knows who everyone in this is, and like, if you are not familiar with the Bible, this movie is gonna be hard to right.
It just genuinely is.
I never watched it before with anything other than just like a glaze over my eyes and we'll talk about it.
But I was kind of struck with, like, how overtly political.
Like a good chunk of the lyrics in this musical are yes.
Speaker 3And that's the other thing.
There is no spoken dialogue.
Every word is a song, and that's just for some reason hard for my brain to pay attention to.
Speaker 2Well, it's like it's operatic, and I think that I'm if I'm not miss saying, I think that JAC Superstar started as like a concept album.
Yes, so yeah, so it's basically written as an opera.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 2I kind of like that, but I also feel like it's easier for and maybe this is like our generation problem, but it's like I feel like when everything is sung, there are so many like large chunks of this movie that I was like, oh, I guess I never really listened to what they were saying, because you're just like, dude, do do do do do do do do, like you're like whatever, But then you listen to it, You're like, oh, oh, oh, okay, okay.
I've been watching this my whole life, and I was like, I just didn't really listen to what Simon was saying.
Speaker 3I don't even know who Simon is.
Speaker 2I got you, I got you.
Speaker 3Okay, all right, here's the story.
We are in a desert in Palestine.
It's sort of two thousand years ago, but it's also sort of contemporary.
Speaker 2It's the seventies.
It's like it's it's I think that the it's supposed to be a bunch of hippies staging a.
Speaker 3Play, right because as shows up, Yeah, and people jump off the bus and get into like costume slash character for the movie that we're about to watch.
Among them is Jesus Christ ever heard of him?
Yeah, played by Ted Neely and.
Speaker 2A white Jesus.
Which, well, it's that's like one of the I think most obviously wrong things with this, Like two Well, I should have said in our prep that in two days from now, my mom and I are going to see Cynthia Rivo as Jesus at the Hollywood Bowl.
WHOA, Yeah, I was really excited because she's gonna it's gonna be the first time that I'll be like, consider Jesus and Jesus Christ superstar.
But Cynthia Riva is playing Jesus and Adam Lambert is playing Judas.
But for the two most I think influential productions of this there is a white Jesus and a black Judas.
So in the original productions Ted Neelie and Ben Vereen and this production it's Ted Neely and Carl Anderson.
This has been I think, like corrected over time.
I think the last production of this that made a cultural wave was when John Legend played Jesus like six or seven years ago.
So this is like a habit that has been corrected over time.
But white Jesus, white Jesus, yes.
Speaker 3Yes, indeed.
Also I read that Ted Neely was like the Jesus understudy in the stage musical, but he did like he had gotcha other parts within the stage production and then was cast as Jesus in the film.
But either way, still involved in both.
Speaker 2Bless his heart.
Wish he wasn't, wish he wasn't so irritating.
Speaker 3Okay, So we meet the cast as actors.
Speaker 2I guess, yeah, they're like community theater.
I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 3And then we meet Judas played by Carl Anderson, who sings a song about Jesus.
Speaker 2Okay, the outfit is great.
I used to really want the orange tied I Judas fit.
Okay, because it's both stylish and comfortable.
He sings Heaven on Their Minds, which is I think, for my money, the best song in the musical.
To me, it's the best song in the musical.
But again a very political song right that I think like pretty quickly gets us into Judas's head in an interesting way where he's just like, Jesus, you're doing too much, Jesus.
Speaker 3That's his way.
He's like, I feel like maybe you've lost sight of the cause and the message that you've been preaching, Jesus.
And yes, I think maybe you're a false messiah and.
Speaker 2Jac superstar like Jesus.
The Jesus of this production is is so bitchy.
Jesus is a is a huge bitch in this one, and I think it's funny.
My favorite scene when I was okay, well, one of my favorite scenes that I would like to laugh at with my cousins is when Jesus, I mean I know that this is like also in the Bible, but that when he goes to the temple and he's like he hates it.
He's acting like he like it's like a Wendy's franchise and he's like, this sucks.
I hate it.
Get it.
Stop everyone's having fun.
Stop.
I know that that's at the point of the scene, but I feel like that's how he plays it, where he's like, ah, he's just like freaking out at the all.
Yes, yes, it's funny.
Okay.
Anyways, Judas is like Jesus is doing too much.
Speaker 3Meanwhile, there are Roman soldiers trooping around because.
Speaker 2In crop tops, mind in little tank tops.
Speaker 3Tank tops because of course, the Roman Empire has occupied hide this land.
Speaker 2Which ironically this movie is not shy, does not shy away from talking about while actively making deals with Israel to make the movie happen.
Speaker 3Well, yeah, right, exactly.
So then we cut to Jesus and his disciples singing.
Speaker 2What's the buzz?
Oh my god, so funny.
All the cuts in this movie are hard cuts because you just never know what you're gonna cut to.
Sure, I think the Apostles really come off as real dufes in this movie.
They seem like goofy little guys that are there fanboys, which I guess is kind of like no offense is kind of what the Apostles were, where like Simon is kind of the street team.
Uh you know there, you could, you could, but what's the buzz?
Is again one of the many songs in this musical that I both have a lot of affection for and is like straight up annoying.
It's annoying song.
A lot of these songs and Jesus Christ Superstar are straight up annoying.
Speaker 3I'm glad you've said that.
Speaker 2And I celebrate that.
I all of like most of the things that are like campy about this movie, even when they're bad.
I love and What's the Buzz is an annoying song that will get stuck in your head for the rest of.
Speaker 3Your life unfortunately.
Yes, yeah, anyway, so we're seeing that.
And then we also meet Mary Magdalene played by Yvonne Elleman.
Speaker 2Oh right, because she was the one person who was actually the main role on Broadway I think, yes, yes, and then Ted Neely was the understudy.
You're totally right, yeah, yah.
Speaker 3So Mary is there tending to Jesus as she does throughout the entire movie, patting his forehead with a damp cloth, et cetera.
Speaker 2She's a bit of a foot freak in this interpretation.
Speaker 3And then Judas shows up to be like, Jesus, why are you hanging out with Mary?
She's a sex worker and she doesn't really fit in with your vibe and your crowd, and Jesus is like, bitch, who are you to judge anyone exact?
And he was right to say it, and he was right to say it.
Speaker 2Judas, you know, Judas is a problematic fave.
Speaker 3He's a character Jesus warf.
Speaker 2Maybe he is Judas.
I'm so glad you said that Judas is a swarf because it's true.
It's true, it's true, and he needs to get over himself.
He had like I just and then with Jesus and Judas, I do think that you're supposed to want to be like at certain points like kiss, like there are especially with the betrayal.
I mean, I guess they do kiss.
They kind of famously kiss.
Speaker 3And that happened in the Bible.
I had to look it up, but.
Speaker 2That you know, Oh no, yeah, there's been wars over that kid.
It's like it's a very famous it's like Titanic, followed by this, yeah, by Judas kissing Jesus before yeah.
Speaker 3Yeah, followed closely by the end of Shrek one where Shrek and Fiona kiss.
Speaker 2I know, and some people disagree.
So people think Shrek just beats out.
She's a centis by just a little bit, but you know, interpret as.
Speaker 3You will exactly.
So Judas is carrying on, and then Jesus is like, I'm sorry, but he is whining constantly.
Speaker 2He's a bitch.
He's bitchy.
He's like, you will not find me arguing this.
Speaker 3He's like, no one even cares if I come or go.
Speaker 2He's no disciples, He's he's like frown he's pouting, he's frowning.
He's like, no one listens to be that.
Later, when he's crowded by people who are poor.
I mean, I do think there's a larger interpretation that I is.
It's so weird because I feel like there is like some nuance in the way that it's written that Ted Neely just does not telegraph at all.
Because when he's like give me by space, like he has so many like annoying little he's just leave me.
Speaker 3I have a lot to say about that scene.
Speaker 2We'll get there, but we'll get there.
Speaker 3Yes, anyway, He's like he's whining, and his disciples are like, how can you even say that, Jesus, we love you.
Then we cut to Caiaphas, a Jewish high priest, the one with the wild hat, and then he has a he has a little buddy, what's his name Annis?
Speaker 2Yes, okay, And their whole appeal lyric, like you know, musically is high voice, low voice, and as a kid, for me, I was like, this is cartoon, this is giving cartoon.
Their songs in particular, I for sure never listened to the lyrics because I was just like ha, big and small.
Speaker 3I had to pay such hard attention.
And here's what I have deduced that they're singing about.
Speaker 2And this first, their first song, was added for the movie.
Speaker 3Oh okay, I did read that one of their songs was an addition.
Speaker 2Believe it's this one.
Speaker 3Yeah, okay.
So basically what they're singing about is they don't like that Jesus is going around and calling himself a king and something has to be done about him.
Then we cut back to Jesus and now Mary is putting some ointment and murdror on him, and maybe Frankinsonse is involved, I don't know.
But she's singing everything's all right, Everything's fine.
I forget the melody of.
Speaker 2That everything's up.
Yes, uh yeah.
Unfore I well, this is more of a like classic bectal cast discussion.
But like, it is unfortunate that like such a historically compelling character as Mary Magdalene is reduced to a handful of like Jesus is so awesome.
I love kind of songs.
I love him, but I think that von elleman performance is like really good.
Her second song, in particular, I don't know how to love him.
I've was obsessed with that song.
I have like a very strong memory of walking around my neighborhood thinking of like a kid in my neighborhood, I had a crush on, like saying that song to me.
I don't know how to love Cory, go wow.
Corey was my Jesus at the time, brave, and I didn't know how to love Corey.
He didn't He certainly didn't know how to love me.
He didn't know I existed.
Speaker 3Okay, anyway, So Judas is there also, and he's like, what the hell, Jesus, why did you spend money on that expensive murror when we could have used it to feed the poor?
And Jesus is basically like, relax, guy, there's not much we can do for poor people.
We should just appreciate the nice things we have.
And I'm like, wait a minute, which.
Speaker 2Is like a very broad Yeah, I'm curious for Bible heads out there, how oversimplified is this?
Because it's like I feel like what I kept losing in the plot, or like what was not clearly communicated for those of us that aren't Bible heads.
Right, I know that Jesus knew he was going to die soon, like this whole time, he knows he's about to die, But I feel like that is not very clearly telegraphed in ways that like, I think in this scene he is being callous, but also he seems needlessly callous in like sometimes he's being like I don't have time.
I don't have enough time in my life to fix this gigantic systemic problem.
But that was never clearly communicated because I think it's assumed that we know that already.
But he just comes off looking like, ugh, I don't know, I don't know.
You're like Jesus.
Speaker 3It just seems like he doesn't care about poor people.
Speaker 2Which is but canonically not true about him.
Sure, exactly, it's weird.
Speaker 3Yeah, it's bizarre.
Then the next day, Caiaphas and a council of priests gather to discuss Jesus how he's dangerous because they think the Romans will kill all of the Jews because of Jesus's antics, so he has to die for the sake of everyone else.
Speaker 2And I think it's like a play bike.
I mean on that first song between because I really had to listen to the lyrics of the Caiaphas and Anna's songs because it's so cartoty and distracting.
But I'm pretty sure that and again historically I've seen this has been disputed.
I don't really know, and I know that Kiaphas and Annas are the characters that are most commonly accused of being more overtly anti Semitic, as well as the way that the crowds are depicted towards the end of the movie, which we'll get to, because I think the way that ponscious Pilot is characterized in this movie is like extremely generous, which we'll get to, and that is another common criticism of this movie.
But I'm pretty sure in their first song, Kiaphas is both saying what he says to the council or whatever you call a group of priests.
I don't know where He's like, Jesus is dangerous and we have to kill him.
But I think he's also doing that with the knowledge that like, if he's the one that makes that call, it will be good for him politically.
Speaker 3Sure, Yeah, in any case.
Jesus meanwhile and his followers are traveling through the desert and they're singing, Ho, Sanna, Hey, Sana.
I don't know what they're saying.
Speaker 2They love his ass, they love him.
They're like yes Jesus and say war.
Speaker 3And then in a different musical number, his disciples are singing Christ you.
Speaker 2Noah, I love you, oh my God, oh my God.
That saw that dance number is unhinged.
Okay, so that's Simon's.
So I had to check this because again, like all of this movie is just like a blur in my brain where I know all the words, but what any of them mean.
So Simon is one of the Apostles, which I guess I never really connected before.
He is, from what I can gather, kind of the street team of the Apostles, where.
Speaker 3He's leading the flash mobs, et cetera.
Speaker 2Yeah, he's doing the flash mob.
He's like the social media director of you know, Christianity sort of, I guess.
But so I think that the implication is that, like Simon has been away spreading the word of Jesus and is bringing all of these people back as followers of Jesus.
And again, I'm like, I know that there's a listener being like wrong, Jamie, but I really really try.
I just need you to know that I tried.
Speaker 3I tried.
Speaker 2I think my understanding of and I think this is like a criticism that I have of the movie where Simon is coming back and says in that song like he is implying that Jesus's presence could be a huge difference in liberating the Jews from the Romans, and Jesus is sort of like, well, I'm going to die in three days.
But Simon says, yeah, Christ, what word do you need to convince you that you've made it?
And you're easily as strong as the filth from Rome who rape our country and who've terrorized our people for so long.
Keep them yelling their devotion, but add a touch of hate at room, you will rise to a greater power.
We will win ourselves a home.
So a lot of loaded language there, but I think like that the core of what he's saying is that Jesus' presence could be a liberatory force against an oppressive regime and Jesus like with regularity is just sort of like no, shrug, Yeah, you're like, well, what's the point of you then, Jesus.
But I feel like that's not the musical seems to feel like Simon is wrong, and the musical seems to feel like any like and that I mean, Judas famously is wrong about certain things, but that like Judas's perspective of like I don't know, like I just feel like any like larger liberation that is proposed in this movie is dismissed as being naive.
Again, I'm like, I guess that that's I don't know if that's more criticism of this musical's interpretation or the Bible itself.
I don't know, but I know that it bothers me.
And it sucks to see any character that proposes leveraging someone's celebrity and influence to liberate people as being like, well, no, we're not going to do that, as ridiculous you know, yeah.
Speaker 3Yeah, I was barely following any of that.
Speaker 2Well, it's also because yeah, they're doing like jazz hands throughout this like pretty serious political lyrics, so I had to It sucks because like when you're reading about this musical, you also have to like vet the source considerably because you're like, this could be any number of like overtly religious interpretations of it.
And I was like, is there And I was able to find a few places that I felt like were credible that we're able to help me through this because because also, I mean, I know that this comes up in the conversation around this movie all the time, like early to mid seventies was weirdly I still can't figure out why, but like God and Jesus musicals, people were like, let's do it more because this came out the same year as Godspell.
Speaker 3Yeah, there were a bunch of movies with like strong religious overtones and like specifically Christian overtones in this era.
Also, like Monty Python's Life of Brian came out sometime around.
Speaker 2Here, And if anyone can help me understand why, because that is not something I've I've seen it obviously presented as like, wow, this was happening a lot.
I'm like, surely if it was happening that many times and like massively successful, but like what was going I don't know.
I also think that this movie is like there's a few moments where it's trying to make comment on the Vietnam War in different places.
It's like it's trying to do I just don't understand why this, like noween seventy three was like Jesus Musical year, but but it was.
I don't know, and I'm not I don't.
Honestly, god'spell is none of my business.
I don't know.
Speaker 3I've never seen it, don't know it neither.
Speaker 2I know that Victor Garber plays Jesus, so that's.
Speaker 3Fun Victor of Titanic fame anyway.
Speaker 2But it's somehow a musical that I find even more annoying than this one.
Speaker 3Okay, so all right, So then we meet Roman official Ponscious Pilot.
He has heard about this Jesus fellow, and I think at this point he doesn't really know what to make of him.
I think again, the songs are hard to pay attention to.
Speaker 2Panta's Pilot is straight up like emo boy, like it's so bizarre to me, and I was this was something I attempted to look into.
It's like, is this at all?
Is this a normal way to portray Pontcious Pilot as sort of this?
Because I feel like throughout the movie Pancha's Pilot, who is like a Roman leader.
I think that you could say, like at the time, he would have been the most powerful person in the movie in an immediate sense, but they make it out to be.
And I guess that this is not super unusual.
And there's a lot of Western interpretations of pontchous Pilot that sort of fall along these lines as like that he was and again I don't agree with this, but I also don't know the Bible that he was portrayed as capitulating to whatever would make him most popular, versus actually feeling strongly that Jesus needed to be killed.
But again, the way that it's like telegraphed in this adaptation to me makes him seem tortured and sympathetic in a way that I find really really off putting.
This is like and I didn't know this still today, but like that That's another common criticism of the movie is that like poncious Pilot, I feel like, is the kind of like just such an obvious villain that I don't really I don't have a particular interest as if you were, and like, well, did he feel conflicted about murdering people?
Like who gives a fuck.
But I feel like this movie kind of gives a fuck.
Speaker 3Right, because he's an agent of the occupation.
Speaker 2The Roman is the occupation, right, So like that's the thing, is like he is the occupation.
And so if I'm understanding the hierarchy correctly, here, ponscious Pilot is like a Roman leader.
He is the occupation.
He has these various minions.
He sends Jesus off to King Herod because King Herod and again, please correct me if you're wrong, but like King Herod, I think politically was considered King of the Jews at that time, which is why his whole song is making fun of Jesus for saying he's king of the Jews because he's like, I'm King of the Jews when I think historically he may not have even been Jewish, but he was like an enforcer of the occupation.
And then you have Caiaphas and Annas who are Jewish priests who are trying to appease the Roman Empire.
But like, yeah, poncous Pilot is the most powerful person in the movie.
So I don't understand why.
I mean, I understand why because that happens in populist movie, making all the time.
It's why you have fucking like Darth Vader narratives and like people love to be like, well, this like oppressive fascist, Like what's going on in his head?
How did he get there?
But I don't know because this music is such a mess.
I just the performance is fine, you know, my hat off to Bury Dennin, but it's just like he literally looks like the leader of Like he looks like Gerard Way.
I'm like, what are you doing?
He looks like he's like my chemical romancing his way through this poncious pilot performance where he's like, oh, it's so hard to have so much power and be like I have to kill people.
Like I don't know that interpretation, Yeah, just I don't.
I don't like it.
I don't like it.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Yeah.
That becomes abundantly clear in a scene towards the end of the movie.
Speaker 2Right where he like leans down to Jesus.
He's like, I really don't want to do this, but the people are asking, so whatever he was in Titanic?
Did you know that?
Did you know that Barry Dennan was in Titanic?
Speaker 1No?
Speaker 3Who did he play?
Speaker 2Praying man?
Oh?
Caw wait?
Let me actually I didn't look up a picture because I bet we will recognize him as praying man.
Speaker 3Yeah, please send it to me.
Speaker 2Oh my god, Oh my god.
Wait, he's kind of iconic, remember him.
Speaker 3Oh yeah.
And they're like, can you move a little faster through that valley there, because he's like saying something something through the shadow of the valley of death.
Blah blah blah.
Whoa.
Speaker 2I was excited to give that fact to you, and then I forgot to look up what they meant by that.
He's literally, wow, he's praying.
He's praying man, unlike ponscous pilot.
Yeah, he was not moving through that valley because he killed Jesus.
Anyways, what range.
Speaker 3So true?
So true?
Okay, So then we're at a marketplace in Jerusalem.
Merchants are selling stuff and.
Speaker 2Jesus at the mall.
Jesus at the mall's picked.
He throws a fit at the mall because.
Speaker 3The idea is that this is like a group of heathens who are shaking their asses and doing drugs and selling weapons and yeah, stuff.
Speaker 2Like that, which feels I mean, and this is just me my interpretation of the vibes of this scene.
It feels a little bit tongue in cheek because it's so like overtly sexy, and it's like a story without a story where you're like, it's so wild that these community theater actors are shaking their asses right now.
But yeah, no, Jesus pitches a fit at the mall and you're like, Okay, he's being Jesus is being a swarf now, but he's also kind of being anti capitalist, and.
Speaker 3Which is Jesus's whole thing.
So I was like, why weren't you like that before when you were talking to Judas who knows, but he trashes the market.
Speaker 2He pitches a fit at them all.
Speaker 3He really does.
And then Jesus goes to what I believe is a leper colony, this community of people who are disabled and dealing with disease and they're hoping that Jesus can heal them, and he tries to help, but the sheer number of people is overwhelming and he's like, there are too many of you.
Leave me alone.
Speaker 2And I get it.
It's like I think that I'm I'm whatever.
There's a lot of things that are wrong here where it's just like again, this the way that this narrative is just overall from Jesus's perspective, dismissive of poverty and dismissive of the underclass in general, like anyone vulnerable who's like that's that's Jesus, his whole thing.
But he seems to not be interested in this movie, which is why I do think it's like it's a it's partially just not a good performance.
Sorry, Ted Neely.
I feel like the most generous interpretation I could get to, but it's like he's not a good enough actor or really singer to pull it off.
Is like the concept of like he is one person and like cannot possibly fix something this massive in the amount of time.
Like it's like I do think that there is like this element that you can feel in certain numbers.
I feel like it comes across in that song Gosemine, where it's like his what he wants to accomplish is too massive for one person, which but the ways that that's demonstrated makes him look like a real asshole totally like yeah.
Speaker 3Yeah, it's it's bizarre.
But then we cut to that night while geez this is sleeping, Mary Magdalene sings about how she loves Jesus but she doesn't know how best to love him.
Speaker 2And I like I do.
The part of the song that made me laugh this time around was that she was like, and if he asked me to be his girlfriend, I'd be like no.
I like like, I'd panic, I'd say no.
Speaker 3Yeah, and good for her?
Speaker 2Yeah, same, I would.
It's too much pressure.
I don't want to be Jesus's girlfriend.
Speaker 3A lot of pressure.
Speaker 2Yeah, oh my god, the tabloids.
Speaker 3Yes, okay.
So then the Batman theme starts playing, no no, no, no no no no, Judas.
Speaker 2Who can say why?
And there was a whole lawsuit around this.
There was, of course of lawsuit because there had to be because also this came out like this concept album came out in the early seventies, which was so close to the Batman Show being on TV that it would.
Speaker 4Have been like I was writing a musical about Jesus and then this theme from SpongeBob just started playing like it was so Angeloi Webber, what a what a fucking loser?
Speaker 2Any?
Speaker 3Very bizarre?
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 3Yeah.
So then Judas goes to Caiaphas and his minions to be like, we got to stop Jesus.
Speaker 2No no no no no no no.
Speaker 3And Caiaphas is like, okay, we'll pay you to tell us where we can find Jesus.
So Judas accepts pieces of silver and says that they can find him on Thursday night in a garden that I don't know how to say what it's called.
Speaker 2I think it's gives them any yep, Okay.
Speaker 3Then we cut to the Last Supper.
Jesus and his twelve apostles break bread and drink wine, and then Jesus sings about a suspicion that one of the apostles will betray him, and he knows that it's Judas.
Speaker 2Real housewives of the Garden of CASSEMONI hmmm, he starts.
He once again can't help himself.
He has to pitch a fit.
I mean, to be fair, it's his last night on earth.
Let him cook.
But like right, Also, none of his friends stay up with him on his last on the last night of his life, which is rude, pretty much rude.
Speaker 3Yeah, they should have had a slumber party where they stay up all night.
Speaker 2They should have watched a movie.
Speaker 3M oh wow.
Anyway, so Jesus knows that Judas is betraying him, so he casts Judas away, and I love the part where he runs away in the middle of a bunch of like sheep who were fucking.
Speaker 2Away, makes you think it's us.
It's set, it's set, and it makes you think maybe he's one of the sheep.
Speaker 3Whoa.
Speaker 2Yeah, yeah, I remember my Sunday school teacher pointing that out.
And but good, this is a good use of our time.
Speaker 3Yeah, exactly.
Okay.
So then Jesus sings to God asking why God wants Jesus to die.
Speaker 2I think this song is interesting.
I don't Again, I'm not familiar with the biblical parallel.
I don't like the song, but I like what the song is doing.
I feel like this movie does to varying degrees of I think this is one of the movie's more successful moments at attempting to humanize Jesus and be like, well, if you had to die for nebulous reasons tomorrow, you would also be having a bad night.
Like that's so true, that's so true.
Speaker 3Yeah.
I like the way this song builds.
Speaker 2Yeah, I'm excited to see Cynthia Arrivo sing that song because that neally is so annoying.
I'm like, I just can't root for him.
But yes, I like the premise of that song.
Yeah, and then he's like fine, i'll die.
Speaker 3Fine, I'll do it.
Speaker 2God, you bitch.
He's like, Dad, watch stop killing me.
And I guess God offscreen is like, sorry, sorry, sorry, son, you'll thank me someday.
Speaker 3And well, just like every other movie, this is a story about fathers and sons.
Speaker 2I mean, the Bible really is the ultimate fathers and sons.
Sorry, like enough enough already.
Okay, So the next morning, Judas is back and he gives Jesus a little kiss and Jesus is like stop that.
Speaker 4Stop.
Speaker 2Even though Jesus he's so he's so annoying, he's so messy, where he's like, you have to go do this because God said you have.
Like, because I think that that's a part of it that also isn't telegraphed well in the movie, is that like this is all like something that Jesus knows is going to happen because he was told it's going to happen.
And it's almost like Judas is doomed to do this in some way, but then whenever he's doing it, Jesus is like you he suck.
It's just weird, right.
Speaker 3So, also because I didn't know this, I've never read the Bible, I don't know the details of this story aside from the very basics of like Judas betrays Jesus and then he's crucified.
Yeah, I didn't know why this kiss happened.
Oh and the movie does not make it clear.
So no, I kind of like that.
I kind of liked that.
The movie is just like, what do you think, Yeah, they just kissed.
Speaker 2Do you like it?
Speaker 1So?
Speaker 2And I'm like, yeah, yeah, I like it.
Whatever.
Speaker 3Also, when you do like a search online for like Judas betraying Jesus, because I was like trying to find this story as told by the Bible to see like how it compares to the movie adaptation.
When you look at the like images from this search, most of the images of this are of Judas kissing Jesus, and it's like, you know, arguably homo erotic.
And I don't know why people don't talk a at that more.
Speaker 2I think that I do think people do talk about it.
Speaker 3I'm just not paying attention.
Speaker 2No, I just I definitely I don't know.
I was aware of the kids.
But I also feel like the kiss is like I'm trying to think of another like piece of media where it's reproduced but the like, well, it's actually it's actually reproduced in succession at some point.
Whoa, Yeah, Kendall kisses his father on the cheek before selling him out.
So if you ever see two aggressively straight men doing a kiss on the cheek, something is about to go down.
But in this movie, I would say that this is not at all an aggressively straight movie.
It's uh no, it's I mean, there's a lot of problems with it, but I wouldn't say that it's rigid.
Heterosexuality is one of them.
But yeah, they kiss.
Speaker 3They kiss because Judas had told Kiaphus that the person thereafter is the one who Judas will kiss.
He's like, the way that you know who you need to arrest is the person that I'm gonna kiss.
Like that was his little signal, okay Jesus, and so that's why he kisses Jesus.
Speaker 2It's so weird because he could have been like the person who's.
Speaker 3Hand I shake, could have done the person I'm gonna yeah, or I'm gonna give an apple to something.
Speaker 2But it's also like I think it's like I I like it, okay, in defense of the Bible, go on, because I do believe this story is mostly made up, right.
I feel like the kiss is a good symbol because and I think that this is well telegraphed in Carl Anderson's good performance is that like he loves Jesus and that like he's also like knows that he's doing this horrible thing and saying goodbye at the same time.
So I feel like a kiss makes sense because it's like if it was a if it was something less intimate or personal, I feel like it would almost be like, oh did he and Jesus would say this, did you ever even care about me?
Did you?
Because that's like half of his songs, Like, does anyone even even like me?
Even like me?
I can't believe that?
And ever meanwhile, everyone's obsessed with him.
He's just like a cheerleader.
But I liked and I also just like Carl Anderson kissing someone because then I can be like, what if I if it was me?
Mm hmmm, So yeah, pro kiss.
Speaker 3I think they should have kissed on the lips.
Speaker 2But I think they should have gone to second base.
Speaker 3Yeah yeah, yeah, Okay.
So then the Romans capture Jesus and his apostles and bring them to Caiaphas who's like, how dare you say you're the son of God.
Then they take Jesus to Ponscious Pilot, who's very condescending, and he's like, who even are you Jesus Christ?
I have never heard of you.
You don't seem like a king at all.
Speaker 2And Jesus regularly and I'm Sugar's a biblical significance, but I just think it's fundy where they're like, so do you think you're a king?
Speaker 3Do you think your cave of the Jews?
And he's like, I don't know.
You're the one who said that, you not me.
Speaker 2I know you are, but what am I?
Speaker 4Like?
Speaker 2They're like, okay, okay, that was a silly one.
I'm sure that happens in the Bible.
Ball was like whatever, whatever, yeah these.
Speaker 3Queens, Okay.
So then Ponscious Pilot kind of passes Jesus off to King Herod, who says, well, well, well, if it isn't Jesus Christ, son of God, prove it, walk on water and turn water into wine.
But Jesus refuses, so he's taken away and imprisoned in a cave.
Speaker 2And we will and we referenced this already, but that number is just like needs to be seen to be believed.
Speaker 3And the costumes and the makeup in that scene really quite something.
Speaker 2Really just yeah, who I was just like, whose idea and why?
And I don't I haven't been able to find someone who can give a satisfactory answer.
But it happens, and that's really kind of the I meant.
You cut to Herod once or twice at other points in the movie, including at the crucifixion.
Speaker 3Yeah, but that's.
Speaker 2Really his only part.
Speaker 3Yeah, I don't know if that's think we've seen him in character at least up until this point.
Speaker 2No.
Yeah, you see him in a T shirt when you see him come out of the bus.
Speaker 3Yeah, right, and he's like flooping his hair a bit.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 3Anyway, So then we cut to Judas and he suddenly feels very guilty about this whole thing.
So consumed with remorse, Judas hangs himself.
Then it's Jesus' trial.
Speaker 2Spoiler alert, It does not go well.
Speaker 3Does not go well.
No, Caiaphas and the other people who are against Jesus saying about how he needs to be crucified, and Ponscious Pilot is like, well, I don't think we need to kill him.
But if it makes you feel better, I'll flog him.
Speaker 2I'm like, and I'm just sideyeing this whole narrative.
Thirdily of like this again, the most powerful colonizer in the movie is like I don't want to you made you made me do it, which I do think is another and again listeners correct me if I'm wrong, but another fairly anti Semitic narrative that surrounds this story that is not challenged in this work at all, which is like, quote unquote, the Jews killed Jesus, right, And that is basically what how Ponscious Pilot is written and how the crowd responds like is very not pushing against that interpretation at all.
Speaker 3I've never seen Passion of the Christ, but I remember that being a lot of the discourse around that movie when.
Speaker 2It came out.
Well consider the author exactly.
Yeah, one of the most anti Semitic celebrities of all time.
Yeah, I haven't seen it either.
I Oh wait, are you talking about the Scorsese one or the mel.
Speaker 3Yeah, this corse not the mel Gibson one.
Okay, Scorsezy one is the last Temptation of Christ.
Speaker 2And that's Willem defoe Jesus yes.
Speaker 3Right, I have seen that one any good.
I don't remember.
Speaker 2I really Yeah.
Once I saw Jesus Christ Superstar, I was like, I get it.
I don't you know, I don't think that there's gonna be a more fun way to tell this story, so I don't think try to watch the others.
But yeah, anyways, I and honestly, I hadn't thought about that in a long time, and have seen this so many times that I didn't even think about it.
But when I was going back through it, I was like, oh, yeah, that is like pretty straightforwardly adapted, without question.
Speaker 3Yes, So Jesus is publicly flogged.
Mary Magdalene watches on in horror, but the angry mob still wants to crucify Jesus.
Then we get a big musical number Jesus Christ Superstar.
Oh my god, And I don't really know what's happening here is it?
Speaker 2I love it?
I don't know.
Speaker 3Okay, here was my interpretation, don't I don't know if I'm way off, because this is being intercut with Jesus like dragging the cross through the desert and then him being crucified.
Speaker 2Which I think is way better than harping on the intense violence of the Crucifixion, which I think is like what every other adaptation really and so much Christian imagery, like the crucifix in my Grandma's house.
You're like, enough, what the fuck?
Speaker 3I don't know why there's so much like reveling in the violence of that, but yeah, the movie, at least this movie does not do that.
Speaker 2They're like, they're like, what if we did the little opposite of that and intercut a sexy disco number, so questions things.
I have thoughts about this.
I'm excited to hear your thoughts.
Speaker 3My interpretation is that, like this is sort of a flash forward after he has like ascended to heaven.
Because Judas is also there, everyone is in like white clothes.
Speaker 2It sort of implies that Judas with heaven and you're like, yes, okay.
Speaker 3Great, I didn't even think about that.
Speaker 2Yeah, but with a bunch of sexy angels.
Speaker 3So that was my interpretation.
I don't really know.
Speaker 2I agree with you.
I think that like it's I don't know.
To me, I just sort of it feels like both a way to circumvent the harping on the extreme violence that is like the most common way to depict the Crucifixion, and it's like just sort of stating the thesis of the movie where in a way that I think is very like sympathetic to Judas again where hold on, let me just pull up the lyrics, where it's like Judas's character and I think it is like supposed to be him, you know, saying the same thing he did at the beginning, but with the knowledge of what happens in the story, where he's like saying why why, why?
Why was it like that?
Let me find I don't know, it just feels very like Silly in seventies in some ways, where he's like, why didn't you come to Earth in the seventies?
That's basically the thesis of the song.
It's like why did you why did you go?
Why did you choose this time in this place?
Where which in a way feels very overly optimistic because I don't know in the way that I think that a lot of the way that this production, in terms of its like casting and its politics, are saying like, assume that we now live in a less prejudiced and hateful world, which of course we do not.
But I think that that the production takes a more optimistic bent and just gets silly, where did you mean to die?
Like that?
Was that a mistake or did you know your messy death would be a record breaker?
That lyric is nuts, like like you can't say that.
So yeah, I think that it's like the movie's attempt to honestly, like I I've before having for this, I knew the words that I never thought about them, because once again you're just thinking about Judas's outfit because you're like, whoa, He's wearing a full white suit with like fringe everywhere.
He's surrounded by sexy angels and he's just like, Jesus, that was so weird.
Why did you do that?
That was wild?
And then it's over.
They get well, they get back in the bus.
Speaker 3They get back on the bus right so after this, but you don't say, Jesus get back on the bus and what the hell is that about?
Well, because he is in heaven, he died.
Speaker 2Did they really kill Ted Neely?
That would be wild if in the world of the play they're like, oops, we killed Ted Neely?
Speaker 3Sad, Yeah, I guess it's like symbolic.
I'm sure Jesus isn't there.
But yeah, they get on the bus and they drive off the end.
Bye bye.
So that's the movie.
Let's take a quick break and we'll come back to discuss.
Speaker 2And we're back where to start.
I know we've covered a lot of the smaller stuff throughout the recap, but yeah, is there anything that is standing out to you?
I mean, I think that you know, we've talked a little bit about how this movie was shot in Palestine and was shot in cooperation and like you say, and like you said, was partially funded by the Israeli government in a way that it's like extremely pernicious and horrible.
Yeah, and in a way that I think is uh.
I guess I am surprised has not been brought up more in the way for a musical that is still very much around that the narratives that exist around its most popular adaptation are never discussed.
Like, this is all stuff that I've learned in the last year or.
Speaker 3So, And I mean, I have a whole spiels let's get into it just about I mean, so the movie again, like doesn't shy away from acknowledging that the Romans were occupying Palestine at the time these events were taking place.
Speaker 2But what it does shy away from is Palestine.
Yeah, and that Jesus was Palestinian and.
Speaker 3Like Jesus was a brown Palestinian Arab, which again, this movie and most media, like mainstream media, that depicts Jesus very much subscribes to this idea that Jesus was a white man with blonde hair and blue eyes.
And this movie is no exception.
There is more diversity in the cast than I would have expected.
Speaker 2Right, But it's pointed like, I think what's interesting is there is diversity in this movie, and I like that.
In the framing device, it's like, this is a group of actors in the seventies question Mark just making a deal with the Israeli government to put on a play, and you're like, well, that's fucking horrible, especially if you consider what the plight of the Palestinian people was in the nineteen seventies, where there is an ongoing occupation, and I think that a lot of I mean Norman Jewison also, his other most famous movie is Fiddler on the Roof, which specifically the theatrical adaptation, but I've never seen it, but my understanding is the theatrical adaptation of it takes a far more Zionist bent than the stage musical did, and so Norman Jewison while he was a Christian director, which I think a lot of people get confused about because of his last name, where it's like, yeah, I guess if my name was Jamie Mormon, people would make assumptions.
But he was a Christian director, but in his two most famous movies either took a Zionist bent or in the case of Jesus Christ Superstar literally was in cooperation and being funded by Zionists.
And yeah, I mean it's it's so much of we see of what we still see spoken about now, and this feels particularly horrific when Gaza is being literally starved before our eyes as we record this to see even a movie that has a small part in uplifting this false narrative, while also like you're saying, Caitlin saying the right things and being anti occupation, but it's like it's only anti occupation to a point, because it's like it's anti occupation but unwilling to acknowledge Palestinians in any way, shape or form.
Speaker 3Right, like you have Judas singing lyrics something to the effect of, listen, Jesus, do you care for your race?
We are occupied?
Have you forgotten how put down we are.
But also this is coming from the person that we are meant to think is the villain or that, like you know, in this narrative, Judas is maybe not this.
Speaker 2Movie, Judas is definitely the best.
Yeah, that's the thing.
I think that like that, again, I don't know how Judas is portrayed in the Bible because I just am not going to read it, but that, like Judas is, it's so frustrating because it's like Judas's perspective I think is like made out by the movie to seem valid at different points, but then isn't at other points.
And I think Simon is very similar, where like Simon is I think effectively making the argument of like leverage your power and your influence and all of these followers we have won you to help dismantle this oppressive force, and Jesus is sort of like that's not possible.
I can't do that.
And I don't know, like it's just it's so muddy.
But I do think it's interesting that the message is overtly stated repeatedly, but like you're saying by characters who are ultimately either villainous or misguided, even if they love Jesus where it seems like ultimately the Jesus shrug is like the takeaway, which is which is really really frustrating.
Speaker 3Yeah, you would think this movie would be way more anti occupation, or that Jesus would be way more outspoken about the occupation, but it kind of doesn't really happen.
Speaker 2Again in the source text, I don't know, you know exactly what is said or isn't, but it's like Jesus, even in the most like popular like straight up white Christian nationalist interpretation, is a champion of the underclass.
Speaker 3Yeah, people living in poverty, people who are dealing with who are sick illness, who are sex workers?
Like right, everyone knows this about Jesus, the.
Speaker 2Politically disenfranchised exactly, And that is not the vibes this Jesus is giving off, not at all.
Speaker 3That's those traits are more ascribed minus the like pro sex work ideology.
Those traits are ascribed to Judas, Yeah, way more so.
Speaker 2Yeah.
I mean I feel like what comes across clearly to me about like what he does at the end when he famously tells everyone where Jesus is.
Speaker 3That was bad, That was bad.
He should not have done that.
Speaker 2I wish he had that was and he was bad for that.
But at the beginning, I feel like Judas is real flaw and I again, it's like a smarter musical maybe could have like expressed these ideas better.
Is that, Like so much of where Judas is coming from is he wants his people to be liberated, but he's afraid, and he's afraid of like what the occupying for is going to do if they are too loud?
Like that's the whole point of the first song of Like he wants to be liberated, but he's afraid that they're being they're being so loud that it's counterproductive, which is like a flawed mindset, right, Like that's not a revolutionary mindset at all.
But then it's like it's not like Jesus seems to have that agenda at all, right, where I think, like of the perspectives presented in the movie, I'm like kind of most with Simon because Simon, like I feel like Simon had is the only person who seems to have a plan and Jesus says no to the plan, but there was a plan.
Speaker 3Yeah, I I don't know.
It's I don't know what to make of so much of this.
Speaker 2It's a mess.
And it's also like you know, written by with all due respective I mean, I Andrew Laid Webber.
You know, he's who's politically a nightmare, right, Like Andrew Laid Webber is a political fucking trash fire, and like is deeply hated by most of his fans.
Yeah, I mean truly, Like I think Andrew Lee Webber is a great example of like someone whose work is like storied and lauded, and all of his fans are like, well, don't listen to what he says, like because he is like a right wing freak who like grew up rich, and it's just like he's horrible.
So is he the person who I trust?
And he wrote this when he was twenty two and so you're like, do I trust a wealthy, white twenty two year old who grew up in a conservative household to give me anything here?
No fair?
Speaker 3I mean, I don't know how musicals work.
Really.
He wrote the music, right, but like not the book and lyrics because that was Tim Rice.
Speaker 2That's Tim Rice.
Speaker 3Yeah.
And then the screenplay for this movie was co written by director Norman Jewison and Melvin Bragg.
Yeah, so it's a lot of white men making this.
Speaker 2Yeah, I the.
Speaker 3Thing I want to say about jew Udas, even though and Jamie, you and I agree that he's the best character and he's the most fun to watch and.
Speaker 2The anthemist actor going with nice compliments towards Carl Anderson, and.
Speaker 3We're kind of rooting for him most of the time.
Culturally, Judas is not thought of favorably by no most Christians, and so I liked, yeah, sorry, you heard it here first.
Well, so I think casting a black actor in that.
Speaker 2Role absolutely it's racist.
Yes, particularly I think like that, and this is done on stage, it's done in the movie.
The image of the hanging.
I think it's very upsetting because that is a casting choice that is made throughout at least the early history.
And again that's like that has nothing to do with the quality of Ben Verie or Carl Anderson's performances.
As we said, they're they're doing laps around Jesus every time.
But it's Yeah, the optics of it are very very ugly, especially because he is the most prominent black actor in the movie, so there is no like, well, there are other black characters that have a lot of other different perspectives.
Like that's not true.
There are other black actors, but most of them appear in the background or in dance sequences or I mean there are black and brown actors.
Like you're saying it is not a completely whitewashed movie, but the parts of it that are whitewashed are I mean, are Jesus like the most famously, poorly incorrectly whitewashed person ever this movie does nothing to which And again, like knowing the composer's politics, I'm not shocked to hear.
And it's just like he's lucky that the likes of Ben Vereen and Carl Anderson would would touch it.
But I agree.
I mean, it's like there's not that I'm not saying I want this, But when you were saying that, where you're like, well, clearly he's wrong, I was like, what if Judas got like the wickedification of Judas is scariot, you know, like I'd watch it Judas wicked because there's like Judas wicked moments because I yeah, like we're saying, like, this movie is not unsympathetic to Judas's plight, but ultimately they're like at the end of the day, you know, the okay, someone, which is weird because Stephen Schwartz, who wrote Wicked, also wrote Godspell.
Oh that was his first musical.
So Stephen Schwartz, well, actually not you.
Someone can someone give me the wickedification of Judas?
I'd watchy, I'd watch that.
But yeah, ultimately, it's it's the casting.
Like casting a black actor repeatedly, particularly opposite a white Jesus is like, be fucking serious, serious, Yeah.
Speaker 3Director Norman Jewison was asked by the Vatican Press why he cast a black actor for Judas, and he said that Carl Anderson quote tested along with many others in London, and as always happens, the film really told us what to do.
The test was so successful that there really wasn't any doubt in my mind at all that he was the most talented actor to play the role unquote, and I doubt.
Speaker 2That he's way better than most of the actors in the movie.
Speaker 3He's very talented.
But you do have to consider and like and there should be far more casting choices and hiring practices and everything based on merit.
However, when there is a harmful trope that already exists of casting black and brown actors to play villains, you gotta be really careful with your casting choices.
Speaker 2So I agree, and like I think that like and again it's like we're two white people have this discussion.
Yes, I feel like it's like if Carl Anderson uncontested, I mean, you can't see the Ben Vereen performance, you can only hear it.
It's also great, But like Carl Anderson, I feel like, is the definitive Judas in this musical.
And it's like, then cast other black actors in other roles, like because like speaking to this like long criticism of this movie, if that is the only black actor, you're giving a prominent role too in the movie.
Speaker 1You know.
Speaker 2Norman Jewison's sort of explanation is like, well, that's on you, that's your fault.
Speaker 3I mean, we're saying that the actor who plays Simon, Larry Marshall, is a black actor.
Speaker 2But I but I would also qualify that with not to the degree that Judas is wrong, he is similarly dismissed as being naive.
I think it's like interesting that you know, both Judas and Simon are the two apostles who are saying the most overtly political things.
They're played by black actors, and they are both either villainized or dismissed.
Right, And that said, the Larry Marshall performance, Oh boy.
Speaker 3Fun, he's dancing his little heart out.
Speaker 2He was in the full Monty on Broadway.
Speaker 3Wow, that's awesome.
Yeah, he's also only prominently featured in one scene.
Speaker 2To the point where, to be fair, that's most characters in this movie.
Speaker 3That's true.
But to the point where at the beginning of this episode where I was like, who's Simon again, Like, I kind of don't know that character.
Speaker 2I think theoretically you're supposed to know who it is because it's it.
But that's a part of the problem of like it's assumed that ever that I mean, it further shows that this movie is made specifically for a Western audience or for a like overtly Christian or Jewish audience, because if you are familiar with the story that it does not do anything to pull you in on what's going on.
But I do, yes, it's while Simon is played by a black actor, I would say that, Yeah, like, Simon is not a prominent character, even if he's a memorable you know, it's a memorable number.
Yeah, it's the best dance number in the movie.
It's the most intense dance number in the movie.
I will say King Herod's song is a really fun dance now that you bring him up, I talk about it.
Let's talk about it.
Speaker 3I mean, we'll get to Mary Magdalen.
But because we're kind of on this topic, I would say the queer coding what of ponchous Pilot and King Herod ponchous Pilot.
Speaker 2I feel like for me, poncous Pilot is open to interpretation.
I definitely think I think more.
I guess I didn't really think of it as queer coding.
As much as I thought of it.
It was just like, I don't know, I thought that ponchous Pilot for me was more complicated, like politically, where it's like he's made out to be way more sympathetic than makes I guess, But I mean, King Herod, what the hell?
What the hell?
I don't know.
I would be curious what our listeners think, because I do think that there is a read of this that is like, this is a beloved dance number.
This is like, I think, been very embraced for the campy number that it seems to want to be.
But the fact that there is heavy queer coding for seemingly no reason at all, is you know, unquestionable.
Speaker 3I mean I think the reason is that King Herod is a villain to Jesus.
So they're just going to do the thing.
Yeah, that a lot of media does Mary Magdalen.
Speaker 2I love Yvonne Elleman.
She's so talented, she's so wonderful.
She also had like a number of hits in I think like the seventies and eighties she was like missus adult contemporary radio.
I guess it's like, unfortunately, there's not a ton to say about Mary Magdalene as it pertains to this.
I genuinely don't know how much more we get of Mary Magdalene's story, although we could talk about The Da Vinci Code, which is a documentary about Mary Magdalene.
Speaker 3Yes, feminist text, the da Vinci Code.
Speaker 2But yeah, I mean she's here.
It's I will say, like, this is a character who is canonically a sex worker, who is presented as a human right like, is presented as a human who is loved and can be loved.
And unfortunately that is not something that you frequently see, particularly the further back in history you go.
So that's good.
They unfortunately she is really only left to be like, I love Jesus.
That's like it.
Speaker 3Most of the scenes she's in, she's tending to Jesus, and her whole care is just sort of like there.
Speaker 2Boyfriend's gonna be killed.
Speaker 3No, And I'm sure that's a source material problem.
Speaker 2I no, yeah, I don't.
I don't think that they were.
They very Negdalen was a feminist hero who was reduced.
But again, it's like, clearly the agenda of this musical is to be subversive and to add things, and I think like in the case of people like Judas, that is done where we do get a clearer look into his inner life and specifically his politics.
With Mary Magdalene, again, I think it's just like kind of a classic sexist thing that is done, where it's like she her existence is political and Jesus's love and acceptance for her is political.
Speaker 3But how does she feel about anything?
Speaker 2Exactly?
Exactly?
And they don't have an interest in it, which is like, well, if you look at the number of men that wrote and imposed and directed and adapted, like, there's just not any It doesn't seem like there's anyone with any meaningful interest in how she would feel, which is a bummer because it's like a bummer, but like because there's space for that here, and it like very cleanly fits into what it seems like the agenda of this is.
But they just are unable to consider her, like she's treated like almost a person but then close, so close, and yet they cannot conceive of her having any feeling about something that is not her boyfriends.
Yeah, and washing her boyfriend's feet, come on, gross grosbr all over him.
I think she did canonically do that, but also yucky.
Speaker 3No, there's a scene where she's doing that.
They're saying, no.
Speaker 2I mean, like in the Bible, I think she's I think she's a she's a she's a foot freaking the Bible as well.
Speaker 3See come on.
Speaker 2I mean, I'm not kink shaming, but like, tell me something else about her.
Speaker 3That's the thing.
People with a foot kink.
They contain multitudes.
Speaker 2Although she's von Ellman is very fun uh fun gal.
I'm really I think she's uh, she's got a fun story of like how she got involved and then became a popular disco artist after this came out, So at least we got ivon Ellerman disco.
I don't know all of this.
This movie is also just like so terminally seventies in every single way that it's like incomprehensible.
You're like, sometimes you're just like, what the why would you do that?
Speaker 3Everyone's wearing bell bottoms.
Speaker 2Everyone's like it's just like, I mean, yeah, this is I'm I'm not the first or last to say this butt Andre Loyd Webber musical, But it's just like this musical doesn't have two brain cells to rub together.
It's just it's like it's ridiculous, which is that's why I fell in love with it, I guess.
But yeah, there's sometimes you're like, there there are some actually like oh, this is a huge problem with this musical, and like let's trace it to why that might be.
And then there are some things about this musical that you're like, I don't fucking know.
I don't think he knows is Crokats?
Like who fucking knows?
Speaker 3Wow?
I mean also worth mentioning that if you're if you're considering like the main three players of this movie being Jesus, Mary, and Judas, two of those characters are played by actors of color.
Ivon Elleman is mixed.
She's Japanese, Chinese, and Irish.
But when you consider again a black actor playing the villain of the story and a woman of color being given basically no characterization, no story, it's the illusion of diversity, but it's not meaningful.
Speaker 2Right, is especially frustrating given like the caliber of a Yeah, and I'm just gonna keep dragging ted Neely, but like, given the caliber of performance from Carl Anderson and Vonelleman compared to ted Neely, You're like, it's just ridiculous.
Yeah.
I think that, like there's there's so much about this movie that just like it is such again that the product of its time, that's like a huge product of its time issue.
I think that I don't know.
I'm curious how this like new stage adaptation is going to work subvert or not subvert.
I really, really, really really hope that they that this production acknowledges this story's roots in Palestine specifically.
I don't feel hopeful because of how negligent most institutions are in doing so, but but also in like like the optics that you're talking about.
I don't know, I don't know this.
There's a part of me it's like this this musical is best left in the past, right, But that's the problem with musicals is that like, if there is a single bop in it, it will never go away ever, and there are unfortunately bops in this and so this is uh.
Speaker 3This subjective.
Speaker 2Okay, listen, sorry to be a bitch on your birthday.
But I okay, yeah, you're being a bitch on my birthday.
I yeah.
Speaker 3So now there's there's some catchy tunes, I suppose, yeah, but yeah, I mean.
Another thing that is not handled well is the representation of disability in the movie.
The scene where Jesus goes to the leper colony that people want him to heal them.
The characters there, they are of course sick and disabled.
They are shown as being in pain and in desperate need of healthcare should be just a basic human right, of course, in an occupation like this, it wouldn't be.
Speaker 2And also, I mean, to be fair, two thousand years in medicine.
Yeah, it's not like that we can take them to the hospital.
Speaker 3But but but there are they are isolated and they're cast out of society.
So this is all very understandable.
However, I would argue that there is another layer that the movie adds to this as far as like portraying these people as being creepy and grotesque, I agree, in the way a lot of media portrays disabled people.
Speaker 2Yes, I agree.
And I think it's like yet another example of like the moments the things in the there is like a limit to what this production is willing to subvert exactly, and it's like very telling what it's willing to suvert.
Yeah, and and and that feel that's from what I understand, is of just straight ahead the way that group is always portrayed, and this movie does nothing to and also to add the shitty Ted Neely perform as him being like ew, go away away from me.
I blamed him for that, but it's still fucking awful.
Speaker 3Yeah.
The other kind of similar thing is there's a very very small part like blink and you'd miss it kind of thing.
But there's this part of the movie where it's during the song where Jesus is asking God about why he wants Jesus to die and the.
Speaker 2Part where the one where he goes, WHOA should I die?
There's a part I want to say that before I die?
Speaker 3Yeah, please do.
There's a part where we see a few like flashes of still images they're like illustrations and paintings that are kind of flashing on screen as he's singing, And most of these illustrations are of Jesus being crucified, but there are a few quick images, and I'm curious if you spotted this, Jamie, there are a few quick images of like onlookers witnessing the crucifixion that resemble the very anti Semitic way that Jewish people would be depicted in like Nazi and other anti Jewish propaganda.
Speaker 2I did not catch that, but I do feel like that ties into what we were talking about earlier about how little this movie pushes back on villainizing Jewish people in general and blaming them for Jesus's death, while like what this musical is also doing and like the limits to its empathy is that it was like everyday Jewish people that forced the occupying force to do this, which is like, if you you know, think about it for a microsecond, is fucking ridiculous.
But I didn't notice that they also put a visual to it that's terrific.
Speaker 3It's literally three quick images, maybe two to or three.
They flash on screen for less than a second each, So it's again like if you're not looking at the screen at that exact moment, you won't catch it.
Speaker 2But because yeah, I know the sequence you're talking about.
But it's like and again, it's like, these are images that exist, but why are you choosing to show them?
Like you can there there's a way to show Again, it's like what I blinked and I missed?
I confess because otherwise it's like it seems like it's trying to say like this, you know, all of the emphasis on the violence that you see in popular art, which that fucking sucks because I thought that that idea was kind of effective, where like that's a familiar image, But like choosing to cut to those anti Semitic depictions of this, like centuries long antisemitic propagation is like what you know, again, what are we doing?
What is the agenda of this movie?
And no one can answer this, No one can answer this question, and so maybe we shall put it in the trash But I and yet I'm saying it two nights, what are we gonna do?
What are we gonna do with Cynthia Arrivo?
Can you fix this?
And the answer is I don't think so, I don't think it's fixable.
Speaker 3Yeah, but.
Speaker 2Okay, everybody, quick update from the future.
I saw Jesus Christ Superstar with my mommy at the Hollywood Bowl last week and ooh, I have thoughts.
It was amazing.
But also I have thoughts, as you've been hearing throughout this entire episode.
The first thing I wanted to mention that we talk about throughout the course of the episode, but I just wanted to address with a little bit more specificity is talking to the specific moment that this movie was produced in mostly the West Bank, but with the cooperation and approval of the Israeli government.
Obviously we talked about that throughout the episode, but specifically I wanted to make no of the fact that, particularly in Gaza, that occupation was not just ongoing going back to the Nakba in nineteen forty eight, but also as of nineteen sixty seven, there was an escalation of violence that led to Gaza being more aggressively occupied than ever before by Israel, and in ways that are directly traced to right now.
So I just want to, you know, take every opportunity to not talk about Palestine as if this started two years ago, and that it is a particularly ugly time for this production to have taken place in conjunction with the Israeli government, because Israel was actively and loudly escalating the occupation, and so any act of cooperation with that is horrific.
As far as the Cynthia Christ Superstar production goes, yes, tell me about it.
So it was a no one to hear that Cynthia Arivo Superstar is incredible, like Ted Neely found dead in a ditch, like she she's I mean, she's like one of the greatest performers living.
I'm pretty sure she's so amazing.
Her her rendition of Gusemini was like I'd never heard the song before, Like not to be over dramatic, but like it's whatever the bull fits seventeen thousand people.
Everyone was crying.
There was a like standing ovation.
It was like low key religious experience, Like it was really really She's incredible.
Weirdly, and I wasn't expecting this because I don't next to nothing about this man.
Adam Lambert is Judas really good, really really like he totally made the part his own.
I just like I was really taken aback at how awesome he was.
I really really liked him.
Ral Esparsa, who is a iconic Broadway actor played Pilot.
And here's where I'm going to be controversial and say I did not like his pilot really very much.
There were clearly roll Aesparsa heads in the house, Kitlyn, I think.
I think the thing he's best known for is that song being a Love You know that one?
Speaker 3Nope?
Speaker 2Okay, well then I sang for a reason.
That is what he's best known for the mainstream Like, he's an incredible singer, a credible performer, but I just did not like his approach to Pilot.
I'll be perfectly honest with you.
I and it actually, even though we talk about throughout the episode, how and this is obviously still true that Pilot is like overly empathized with in this rendition, it did make me appreciate Barry Dennan's performance as Pilot much more because like, if that's going to be the approach of the production, you've got to sell it, and Barry Dennon does sell it, and I don't think her all Asparsa did.
Moving on to Mary Magdalen played by Philip A.
Su who most famously played Eliza in Hamilton, that I think is like her biggest credit she's great, Like we talked about throughout the episode, she's great as Mary, and Mary has basically nothing to do, so there's an upper limit to what she is able to do.
But it was great and it was also really cool seeing they were not leaning away from the lesbian undertones of Cynthia Arrivo and Philip A.
Su as Jesus and Mary.
It was great, nice background of the production, I guess is in the expected obnoxious, racist, misogynous ways.
There was a wave of Fox News backlash to Cynthia Arrivo's casting as Jesus because YadA YadA, a black woman as Jesus.
Never mind what we've talked about.
What you know, Jesus was not white, and Cynthia Rivo's fucking Cynthia Arrivo.
You should be thanking her for being willing to do it.
I think she's next playing Dracula on the West End, which is like, she's just she's just doing whatever.
Speaker 3I love that.
I know.
Speaker 2I kind of want my mom because my mom would die for her.
And my mom was like, do you think we could go?
I was like, oh my god, okay, too much, too much.
We can't go international for Cynthia Rivo.
It's too much.
But so that was a background to the production.
It was very very well reviewed, it was really good.
But I do feel like, and maybe I talked about this earlier in the episode, there are very glaring missed opportunities, particularly doing Jesus Christ Superstar right now.
Not acknowledging the genocide is I think pretty inexcusable.
And it's not just something that I that didn't happen, which unfortunately I wasn't surprised, but like, wasn't something I saw in the press surrounding it at all, which I think kind of it speaks to the media, but it also speaks to how americanized and divorced from its context that this musical has become over time, when if you're paying attention to what the musical is, it's about resistance in the face of an oppressive force, which if that's not Palestine, what is, you know, and taking place in the exact same location.
It's inexcusable to put a massive production of this together and not call attention to that, if not actively do something.
But that is not what this production did, and in fact, they cast a pretty prominent Zionist leaning celebrity to play King Herod that being Josh Gadd.
Oh, yeah, that was not something I was.
I mean, I guess I just didn't know Josh Gadd's politics because I famously hate Josh Gadd anyways, and it turns out I hate.
Speaker 3Fully Born on the podcast before we and.
Speaker 2Yeah, so whoever emailed me saying that I that I was wrong to joh Gad, fuck you.
But but yeah, I mean, not only to completely not acknowledge the genocide that is happening from the side of the Israeli government in this musical that takes place in the same exact location, they cast a prominent Zionist to be a prominent role in it.
So I won't even speak to his performance, because who fucking cares?
That said, Cynthia Arrivo and Adam Lambert, they should take that show in the road, and they should take it on the road with a production that is not afraid to discuss the context that is happening in because it felt very, very glaring and like basically centrist stuff is just like, well, can't we just have fun, you guys?
And you're like not, when you're showing the story of Jesus' crucifixion, you fucking dumbass that said I laughed to cry.
And that's my update.
Speaker 3Thank you.
I'm glad it was an enjoyable time.
It was, and now we will travel back to the.
Speaker 2Past before I had to see Josh Gadden person bless her heart.
Speaker 3So so back to the originally recorded episode.
Do you have anything else you want to talk about?
Speaker 2I don't think so, no, I yeah, this is definitely like it's a movie that is deeply problematic that had a very strong effect on me as a kid.
I do like, I think that there are elements to this movie that I still really appreciate that are mostly connected to Carl Anderson, honestly, and I think just like further, I don't know it is it like when you think of a dated project, this is just this is like the most nineteen seventy three they Oh yeah.
The last I was going to say is again, it's like there is a vague moment of being anti Vietnam War.
Yeah, and I like that.
I like that.
Again, It's it's unclear.
I mean, I'm sure in nineteen seventy three is very clear where there is a moment where Judas is pursued by tanks.
Speaker 3Which would have been Israeli tanks.
Speaker 2Which would have been is again, so it's like the it means nothing, but that was the intention of it, and it's like, yeah, I mean, and that's again where it's like the project just fails for that reason, where it's like, if you're using occupying tanks to make an anti war statement, you're not doing anything.
You're doing worse than nothing.
So as far as the movie goes, it's like impossible to get past.
As far as the musical, I mean the musical as far as I know, you know, it was just in the West End and then on Broadway, and it was specifically the Norman Jewis in production that was making all these calls.
But either way, it ages not great.
I guess my final thought is I love Carl Anderson.
Speaker 3He does a great job RIP.
The last thing I want to do is just a call to action.
Something I've done recently is compile a list of links on my link tree from families in Gaza who have reached out to me on Instagram asking for help.
And so I've basically just started compiling all of those and donating and.
Speaker 2We'll link that below as well, and we will make contributions from our Patreon to that as well.
I hope that most of our listeners are already you know, understand what is going on in our following reliable sources about that.
That would be another I think call to action is to divest from news sources that are not covering, that are either not covering or downplaying or both sides yng what is objectively and has been for so long, an active genocide of the Palestinian people.
So not only giving directly to families who need direct aid, but actively pushing back on these false, half assed narratives that we see pushed at the highest level.
Speaker 3Also follow the BDS movement, the boycott, divestment and sanctions.
It's a Palestinian lead movement that has a list of companies to boycott because that is something that does enact change.
Speaker 2Yeah, and it's something direct you can do.
Right now, we will link all of those below.
And yeah, I think as far as ending this episode, I will be making a five hundred dollars donation to PCRF for my birthday.
If anyone would like to join me in doing that, please do.
They are and have been doing really, I mean, as we've talked about many times on the show, they're doing really important work.
Yeah, this movie does not pass the bachel test.
Speaker 3Sure doesn't even come close.
Speaker 2And I don't even really kind of want to skip the nipples.
I don't think we deserve, we don't need to give nipples to movies that were made with Israel exactly.
But it doesn't pass the Backel test.
And it's and that's my birthday.
Speaker 3And that's your birthday.
Happy birthday, Jamie.
Thank you, Thank you for listening.
Listeners.
Don't forget about our upcoming tour in the Midwest.
Speaker 2Absolutely, we will be there in just a couple of weeks.
We will be in Indianapolis, Chicago, Madison, and Minneapolis.
We hope to see you there talking about the Star Wars prequels.
Speaker 3I'm sorry, sorry, and you're welcome.
Speaker 2Yeah, and we'll see you there.
Bye bye.
Speaker 3The Bechdel Cast is a production of iHeartMedia, hosted by k Lyndarante and Jamie loftis produced by Sophie Lichterman, edited by Moe laboord Our theme song was composed by Mike Kaplan with vocals by Katherine Voskresenski.
Our logo in merch is designed by Jamie loftis and a special thanks to Aristotle Acevedo.
For more information about the podcast, please visit Linktree Slash Bechdelcast
