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Vatican blasts "Golden Compass" as Godless and hopeless

12.19.07 -- 7:44 AM

By Reuters

The Vatican on Wednesday condemned the film "The Golden Compass," which some have called anti-Christian, saying it promotes a cold and hopeless world without God.

In a long editorial, the Vatican newspaper l'Osservatore Romano, also slammed Philip Pullman, the bestselling author of the book on which the family fantasy movie is based.

It was the Vatican's most stinging broadside against an author and a film since it roundly condemned "The Da Vinci Code" in 2005 and 2006.

"In Pullman's world, hope simply does not exist, because there is no salvation but only personal, individualistic capacity to control the situation and dominate events," the editorial said.

The film, which premiered earlier this month in the United States and stars Nicole Kidman and Daniel Craig, is an adaptation of Pullman's acclaimed novel "Northern Lights".

The Vatican newspaper said "honest" viewers would find it "devoid of any particular emotion apart from a great chill."

In the fantasy world created by Pullman's trilogy, 'His Dark Materials', the Church and its governing body the Magisterium, are linked to cruel experiments on children aimed at discovering the nature of sin and attempts to suppress facts that would undermine the Church's legitimacy and power.

In the film version all references to the Church have been stripped out, with director Chris Weitz keen to avoid offending religious cinema goers.
Still, some Catholic groups in the United States have called for a boycott, fearing even a diluted version of the book might draw people to read the bestselling trilogy.

The Vatican newspaper said the film and Pullman's writings showed that "when man tries to eliminate God from his horizon, everything is reduced, made sad, cold and inhumane".

The U.S.-based Catholic League, a conservative group, has urged Christians not to see the movie, saying that its objective was "to bash Christianity and promote atheism" to children.

The Vatican newspaper called the movie "the most anti-Christmas film possible" and said that it was "consoling" that its first weekend ticket sales were a disappointing $26 million.

New Line Cinema, a unit of Time Warner Inc, had hoped the film would pull in between $30 million and $40 million. It is doing better overseas but New Line sold the foreign distribution rights to help cover the movie's cost.

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The film, which premiered earlier this month in the United States and stars Nicole Kidman and Daniel Craig, is an adaptation of Pullman's acclaimed novel "Northern Lights".

The Vatican newspaper said "honest" viewers would find it "devoid of any particular emotion apart from a great chill."

In the fantasy world created by Pullman's trilogy, 'His Dark Materials', the Church and its governing body the Magisterium, are linked to cruel experiments on children aimed at discovering the nature of sin and attempts to suppress facts that would undermine the Church's legitimacy and power.

In the film version all references to the Church have been stripped out, with director Chris Weitz keen to avoid offending religious cinema goers.

Still, some Catholic groups in the United States have called for a boycott, fearing even a diluted version of the book might draw people to read the bestselling trilogy.

The Vatican newspaper said the film and Pullman's writings showed that "when man tries to eliminate God from his horizon, everything is reduced, made sad, cold and inhumane".

The U.S.-based Catholic League, a conservative group, has urged Christians not to see the movie, saying that its objective was "to bash Christianity and promote atheism" to children.

The Vatican newspaper called the movie "the most anti-Christmas film possible" and said that it was "consoling" that its first weekend ticket sales were a disappointing $26 million.

New Line Cinema, a unit of Time Warner Inc, had hoped the film would pull in between $30 million and $40 million. It is doing better overseas but New Line sold the foreign distribution rights to help cover the movie's cost.

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Comments

Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. Silly Vatican. What are they afraid of? That someone might actual think for themselves for a second? Silly silly silly.

December 19, 2007 11:18 AM | Reply

I don't understand how the Vatican can claim that removing religion reduces hope...to me the greatest hopelessness would be the idea of God being true and our choices being subject to the judgement of something we've never seen, and the concept of "no salvation but only personal, individualistic capacity to control the situation and dominate events" makes me feel truly free and hopeful.

December 19, 2007 11:46 AM | Reply

If they really believe that "the film and Pullman's writings showed that 'when man tries to eliminate God from his horizon, everything is reduced, made sad, cold and inhumane'" then what is their problem? If that were true, Pullman's work would be great propaganda for the church.

I've neither seen the movie nor read the books, but it sounds to me as though the church is afraid that Pullman paints a picture of a sane, healthy, happy world without gods or churches

December 19, 2007 1:03 PM | Reply

Are you honestly surprised the church said this or do you even think it’s silly? I understand the response to potter or Davinci being silly but the underlying story actually is admittedly designed to attack the church...and the church is responding. It seems common sense and appropriate. Initially the American bishops supported the movie. People asked to boycott it. If their belief is where their hope is then, to them, yes this movie is devoid of hope. If any other group, the Green party, African Americans, Democrats, Republicans, or New Yorkers had a movie made against them I’m sure there would be a response issued….

December 19, 2007 1:30 PM | Reply

If the church says "don't see it" , that's when I can't wait to go see it. And I bought the trilogy "HisDarkMaterials as soon as I heard the Pope didn't want anyone to buy them. The Biblical God is a monster....and people are far less frightended and miserable believing in Him then disbelieving.

December 19, 2007 5:18 PM | Reply

The church truly is evil.
What other enterprise could legally use the threats that the church uses to keep its customers - eternal damnation, useless worthless human being etc, it disgusts me to my core.

December 19, 2007 7:05 PM | Reply

The revelation here is that the Vatican are having a go at a writer and a movie for something it hasn't got. I haven't seen The Golden Compass, but I have seen 2001: A Space Odyssey. That didn't have any god in it. Excellent movie.

December 20, 2007 7:44 AM | Reply

Actually i understand where the church is coming from. In my own life I've come to understand their point.

December 28, 2007 10:39 AM | Reply

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