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Scorsese Plans Catholic Film?

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Saturday, February 14, 2009 4:49 AM Comments (2)

According to an AFP report Oscar-winning director Martin Scorsese plans to adapt the 1966 novel “Silence” by Shusaku Endo for the screen.

The book tells the story of a young Jesuit priest from Portugal who lands in southern Japan, and of Japan’s brutal persecution of Catholics during the 17th century.

From the report:

Academy Award-winning art director Dante Ferretti, who is close to Scorsese, and producer E. Bennett Walsh this week visited the Nagasaki Museum of History and Culture to research the film.

“They are going to make a movie and so they visited to research Japanese Christian history,” museum spokesman Koichiro Nishijima said.

He said that the pair carefully studied a “fumie,” a metal plaque depicting Jesus Christ or the Virgin Mary that authorities would make people step on in order to weed out Christians.

The Asahi Shimbun newspaper said actors who may star in the movie include Daniel Day-Lewis, Gael Garcia Bernal and Benicio Del Toro—who recently depicted Che Guevara in Steven Soderbergh’s “Che”.

Scorsese plans to start shooting the film in New Zealand later this year and expects it to reach cinemas in 2010, the Asahi reported.

It would be the first major work directed by a foreigner about the subject, a less well-known part of Japan’s history.

As many as 30,000 Japanese are believed to have been persecuted for their Christian faith, which was introduced by Spanish Jesuit Francis Xavier in 1549 but banned for centuries.

The Roman Catholic Church last year beatified 188 Japanese martyrs, mostly laypeople who were tortured to death.

Christians came out of hiding when Japan ended its policy of self-imposed seclusion in the 1860s.

Filed under hollywood

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Our Asian brothers and sisters who were martyred by the hundreds over the
centuries of persecution are great witnesses to the Faith. It is still occuring today all over China and other parts of the Far East. Little is being told or reported by the secular press. Wondering if Scorsese et al
will be commenting upon this current tragedy and persecution?

I remember when the series “Shogun” came out - based on the James Clavell novel - and I wondered how accurate to history the scenese of the Jesuite “orange robes” and the Christian converts being persecuted actually were. So later on, when I had my own computer I researched it, and found out that it was actually much worse, and that many had been horribly tortured, in vile and dispicable ways. It was like they really wanted to frighten the people into giving up the worship of the “Barbarian God” that they called “The Dead God” - the hostility was incomprehensible to me when I was younger. Honestly - it still is. Why does the world hate the love and dignity that Christ brings to each person? I wept for their pain, but they have the joy of the crowns of martyrdom now - thank You Holy Spirit, for giving them the strength of their Faith!

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About Tim Drake

Tim Drake
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Tim Drake is an award-winning journalist and author. He serves as senior writer with the National Catholic Register. His articles have appeared in publications such as Faith and Family magazine, Our Sunday Visitor, Catholic World Report, Catholic Exchange.com, Columbia Magazine, Gilbert! Magazine, This Rock Magazine, and many others. Tim has been a guest on both television and radio. He has appeared on FOX News, Vatican Radio, and EWTN. He is a frequent guest on Sirius XM Satellite Radio's The Catholic Channel. He co-hosts the weekly radio program "Register Radio" on EWTN, airing Friday afternoon at 2 p.m. Eastern. Tim has published six books - his most recent being the coffee-table book, Behind Bella: The Amazing Stories of Bella and the Lives it's Changed, (Ignatius Press, 2008) - and has contributed to several others.

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