Need proof that biblical entertainment is Hollywoodâs holiest trend? Then look no further than Morocco, where three TV projectsâNational Geographic Channelâs âKilling Jesus,â NBCâs âA.D. The Bible Continuesâ and CNNâs âFinding Jesusââwere filmed on neighboring sets last year.
âYou got this kind of âLife of Brianâ-esque world youâre living in, where on all of our days off, thereâs 36 disciples sitting around the pool and three Jesuses at the bar,â said actor Stephen Moyer, who ditched the fangs from âTrue Bloodâ to play Roman governor Pontius Pilate in the Ridley Scott-produced âKilling Jesus.â
Based on Fox Ïăœ¶ÊÓÆ” host Bill OâReillyâs book, âKilling Jesusâ tracks the last days of the Christian Messiah. He is portrayed less as a miracle worker and more as a political threat; the script heightens the sexual tension between Jesus and follower Mary Magdalene (Klara Issova).
âIt plays with the idea that Jesusâ teachings are more important than the doing of miracles, that the idea behind what heâs saying is the point and it doesnât need to have out-of-body, magical elements happening,â Moyer said.
The $12 million production is one of the latest endeavors to give Jesusâ crucifixion and resurrection a grittier, more realistic feelâan approach Mel Gibsonâs âThe Passion of the Christâ introduced in 2004 to earn more than $370.3 million. History Channelâs 10-part miniseries âThe Bibleâ took a similar approach in 2013 and drew 13.1 million viewers for its Easter Sunday finale.
Though âThe Ten Commandmentsâ and âThe Greatest Story Ever Toldâ have become Easter staples, new faith-oriented entertainment has mostly failed to cross over in recent years, with exceptions in âThe Da Vinci Code,â âFireproofâ and âThe Nativity Storyâ in the mid-2000s.
But after the success of âThe Bibleâ, studios have recognized demand and ordered more, including ABC pilot âOf Kings and Prophetsâ and TV Oneâs âTo Hell and Back.â.
âThe Bibleâ was created by producer Mark Burnett (âSurvivor,â âThe Voiceâ) and his wife, actress Roma Downey (âTouched by an Angelâ); they repurposed the seriesâ section on Jesus for a stand-alone feature film âSon of God.â It totaled $59.7 million at the box office last spring, thanks in large part to grassroots marketing in churches nationwide.
Itâs now being followed with an NBC sequel, âA.D. The Bible Continuesâ (begins April 5, 9 p.m. ET/PT), a 12-episode event that takes, Burnett says, a âGame of Thronesâ-approach to the Bibleâs book of Acts, about the early church after Jesusâ resurrection.
With âThe Bible,â âwe didnât make Sunday-school programming. We made stuff that was accurate to the Bible, but realistic, and didnât feel like it had been made on a shoestring budget,â Burnett said. âYou have to treat every hour of television youâre given like a $100 million movie, and with âA.D.,â we stepped it up even a stage further.â
But a spiritual message doesnât always translate to divine success. Last year, âNoahâ and âExodus: Gods and Kingsâ recruited A-listers for biblical blockbusters but earned just $101 million and $65 million, respectively, though overseas box office was more robust. âLeft Behindâ ($14 million) and Kirk Cameronâs âSaving Christmasâ ($2.8 million) didnât have a prayer with audiences or critics, either.
âI donât think Christian audiences, especially younger ones, are going to rush to the theater to support something just because all Christians are supposed to go see it,â says S. D. Kelly, a writer for the website Christ and Pop Culture. âYounger audiences want more nuance and are a lot more forgiving of a âNoah,â and are interested in revisiting (Bible stories). They almost want to have their faith challenged.â
But the glossy commercialization of the gospel isnât for everyone. âIt is kind of an uncomfortable bargain for some people, because they really want to support it and they are entertained by it, but it also feels a little over the top in how we tend to think of Scripture,â Kelly said.
Others embrace it. Rev. Ray Johnston, pastor of the multi-campus Bayside Church in the Sacramento area, praised Downey and Burnett for the accuracy and meticulous care they brought to âA.D.â Like âSon of God,â which Bayside rented out an entire theater to watch last year.
âFor some reason, Christians are known for what theyâre against and not what theyâre for,â Johnston said. âAnything that triggers conversation about faith and values in America is a really good thing,â even if some take liberties with their narratives.