Actor Who
Portrays Christ Has a Personal Message
JIM CAVIEZEL, WHO PLAYED CHRIST IN THE MOVIE, REVEALS HIS
DEEPEST HOPE FOR THE FILM
“My prayer is that I don’t want people to see me in the film; I only want
them to see Christ,” he says
Sunday, February 15, 2004
By Dan Wooding
Founder of ASSIST Ministries
BEVERLY
HILLS, CA (ANS) -- Jim Caviezel, the talented actor
who portrays Christ in the movie, “The Passion of The Christ,” which focuses
on the last 12 hours of Jesus' life, has revealed his deepest hope for the film.
(Pictured: Jim Caviezel, who portrays
Christ in the movie. -- Picture by Dan Wooding.)
“My prayer is that I don’t want people to see me in the film; I only want
them to see Christ,” he told a group of journalist in Beverly Hills recently.
Caviezel, who has soulful blue eyes, and a dark, almost eerie kind good looks,
was born in Mount Vernon on September 26, 1968. One of five children, he grew up
as part of a devout Catholic family and has starred in many films and in 1998
Caviezel had his breakthrough role in The Thin Red Line. The film received a
number of Oscar nominations, and its stellar ensemble cast, which included Ben
Chaplin, Sean Penn, George Clooney, and Nick Nolte, earned almost unanimous
acclaim.
He has starred in many movies since then including his portrayal of a football
coach's embittered son in Oliver Stone's Any Given Sunday. In 2000, Caviezel
starred in the supernatural thriller Frequency, playing the son of a long-dead
man (Any Given Sunday co-star Dennis Quaid) with whom he is able to communicate
over ham radio and he took the lead in the period adventure The Count of Monte
Cristo (2002).
But he has never worked on a movie like his latest with his as Jesus Christ
himself in Mel Gibson's The Passion (2004) in which
he was struck by lightening during the filming and endured his shoulder being
was separated during the crucifixion sequence.
Caviezel revealed what it was like during the making of the film that was shot
in southern Italy and in Rome.
“I would start with the makeup at 2:00 AM and at 10:00 AM we were ready for me
to start the cross,” he said.
He said that the actual crucifixion filming, things got really difficult for
him. “I separated my shoulder and then my eye began to cause me to hyper
focus,” he said. “I also had to learn to breathe while on the cross. I would
then have to get up early in the morning and go through the whole cycle again
and then you have to take off the make up and it takes about two hours to take
off and you sit the in the shower for about 25 minutes and then you start to
sweat. I would have to drink water because I was dehydrated and then hypothermia
would start to kick up during the day. Beside my problem with my shoulder, the
wind would come up and it was like the Grand Canyon and the wind would go right
through you.
“My shoulder would experience terrific pain because of the wind hitting the
cross and it kept pulling the shoulder out of joint and making me go insane.
This was going on over and over again, plus I was getting only three to four and
a half hours of sleep. When you go to sleep at night and you have hypothermia, I
don’t care how many sweats you put on, you shake through the night. So I would
wake up and be shaking and then I would go to work and the skin was starting to
become raw. When they were putting on the make up, I would shout, ‘Ouch,
please don’t touch me here. You are hurting my shoulder.’
“That went on for five weeks just for the crucifixion. We would start on
Monday and go through to Saturday night. On Sunday, I would go to church and
then on Monday I would start the cycle over again.
“At the same time, I had to lift weights for my quadriceps to be able to take
the weight of the cross. They would put me on for about 12 minutes at a time and
so all my weight was going into my right leg.
STRUCK BY LIGHTENING
“Then I got struck my lightening. I was on Golgotha when it happened. It
almost makes you want to quit. I can tell you that Jesus wasn’t smiling on the
cross. It really hurts, but as an actor, I didn’t go through anything that He
went through. I was reading a book and read that he has suffered over 5,000
blows to His body and that really meant something.
“During the scourging scene, I got hit. When they came in with these whips,
they were supposed to hit a metal board behind me, but one of them hit me square
in the back. You know what happened? I went ‘ouch’ and I couldn’t breathe.
It was an automatic response. When the guy hit me, I said something I
shouldn’t have. I added, ‘I know I am playing Jesus, but I feel like Satan
right now.’ Mistakes happen, but you’re the mistake it’s not pleasant.”
He also talked about the horror of crucifixion. “When you are on the cross,
you die by asphyxiation,” he said. “You can’t breathe. When I was up
there, my legs were going numb and then my forceps would go numb. I could get
diaphragm activated to get the air into my chest. They would bring me food and I
would turn around and wretch right there on the cross. It’s amazing. You would
see people laughing. People love watching people suffer. It’s amazing. There
were others who couldn’t stop watching because they were in love with Christ
– yet I’m not Him!”
He revealed how strange it was for him during the filming. “People came up to
me and
called me Jesus, but I never felt adequate that I was Him. The first thing I
said to Mel was, ‘If we don’t carry our cross, we are going to be crushed
under the weight of it.’ He was under attack. The same time that he was
directing, he fighting wars all over the place. I don’t know how he finished
this thing. It was a miracle. God gave us just barely enough to get through.
(Pictured: Mel Gibson (director/producer) directs
Jim Caviezel (Jesus) for The Passion of The Christ, a film by Mel Gibson.
© 2003 Icon Distribution Inc. All Rights Reserved. A Newmarket Films release.
Photo credit: Philippe Antonello).
“I knew what I was in for when I took this film, but I had no idea it would go
in the direction it did. The only thing that scared me where the three
languages, as I barely knew Latin, but knew nothing about Aramaic and old Hebrew
was foreign to learn.”
When asked how it had changed him playing Jesus, he replied, “I now know Him
in a more personal way that I have. I am proud of this film because it is the
truth. It is as it was even though some have tried to discredit that line.”
He then talked about meeting Billy Graham. “I got to be with him for three
hours and he is a wonderful man,” he said. “I remember watching him on TV
one night and I wanted to be one of those people that walked out. When we met, I
told him, ‘I believe you carry the Holy Spirit with you; I believe you are a
holy man.’
“This film is under such controversy. I told someone who said that he had
heard it was a very controversial film, and I said, ‘Have you seen other
passion play that wasn’t? Where they killed a good man?’ Jesus didn’t die
for some mythological story, he didn’t die for fantasy.
“I don’t think I could have done this film without the faith that I have.
During the day, when you work with an academy-award-winning director like Mel
Gibson, why wouldn’t you do a film that is based on the Gospels, but I tell
you, it scared just about everyone away. It scared financiers. It is
controversial. Jesus said, “I did not come to bring peace to the world, but I
came with a sword.”
Click on the Picture to find out more
THE CHURCH GROWTH MOVEMENT - PART 1
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World Business: Chaldeans of The New
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THERE IS NOT ONE CHRISTIAN NATION ON EARTH WHERE MUSLIMS ARE PERSECUTED.
Yet in most nations where the majority of the population are Muslims, there is systematic government persecution of Christians.

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Don't Let anyone tell you that Christians support Forced Conversions.
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