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by Tim Drake
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Jim Caviezel was
already a devout Catholic when he got the role of
Christ in Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ.
But after acting out Christ’s harrowing death in the
movie, he says his faith is stronger still.
Picking Up the Cross
The actor’s career
includes a breakout performance in The Thin Red
Line, a role opposite Jennifer Lopez in Angel
Eyes and the starring part in The Count of
Monte Cristo. Register staff writer Tim
Drake interviewed him on the feast of Our Lady of
Guadalupe.
How did you get the
part of Christ?
It all started when I
got a phone call from my agent saying that Steve
McEveety, Mel Gibson’s partner, wanted to meet with
me on a film called Mavericks. What I later
found from Steve and Mel was that was just a front
to see what I was really like. So we met at some
picnic table up in Malibu, and we started talking.
It went on for about
three and a half hours, and Mel finally brings up
this story about what he’s been thinking about for
many years.
He asked, “You know
how Jesus really died?” And it hit me and I just
said, “You want me to play Jesus, don’t you?”
He stopped and looked
at me and said, “Yeah.”
The next day he
called me and said, “Do you still want to do this
movie? If I were you, I wouldn’t want to play this
role.” It was like he was trying to talk me out of
it, because it could be a career killer. And my
response was that each one of us has our own cross
to carry — we either pick it up and carry it or we
get crushed under the weight of it.
Was there anything in
particular Gibson had you do to prepare for the
part?
Mel and I are just
administrators of God’s work, and that’s all that we
continually ask for. And that’s why we centered
every day on the Mass and receiving the Eucharist.
There was not one day that I was on film that I
didn’t receive Communion. I just try to be the best
Catholic. I go back to the truth: what does the Lord
want? It always comes down to that: what does the
Lord want?
An Honor and a
Torture
What did you have to
go through to make the part work?
This movie was
torture right from the beginning in all forms. I was
spit on, beaten, and I carried my cross for days,
over and over the same road; it was brutal. I had a
2A.M. call time to get skin and makeup put on for
the flagellation and crucifixion scenes, so I was
there long before the rest of the cast and crew.
I considered all of
it worth it to play this role; it’s important to me.
I’ve always made
acting follow truth, and Mary has always pointed me
toward that truth. I really believe that she was
setting me up, getting me ready to play her Son. She
architected this whole thing.
People have asked me,
“Were you scared about getting this film?” And I
say, “Yes, a part of me.” But the other part of me
says that I’m absolutely honored that He, through
Mary, would pick me to play this role.
How has playing the
part of Christ impacted how you pray the rosary?
Before going to the
set every day I prepared myself in meditation or
through the rosary, always through Mary. I also went
to confession, and the Holy Spirit would convict me
of my sins. Once I’d done that, the rest was very
fundamental; it really was.
“It’s Love That Did
This”
The scourging at the
pillar, I understand, was a painful scene for you.
Literally.
Every day when I came
to play, when I started to complain of the pain,
that pain gave in to understanding as to what this
was like. During the scourging scene, Mel had set it
up so there was a board behind my back so the Roman
soldiers wouldn’t hit me. They were to strike and I
could see through a mirror “off-camera” when it was
coming.
I had an idea how bad
that would hurt, but one of them missed and it hit
me, flush, right on the back. It ripped the skin
right off my back, but I couldn’t scream because the
pain knocked the wind out of me. It was so
horrendous that my voice got away from me, quicker
than I could scream. I fell over and Mel said, “Jim,
get back up.” He didn’t realize I got hit.
But that mark on my
back was the mark that we based all the other
scourging marks off of and how it really looked. I
wasn’t struck again after that, but that incident
let me begin to understand what it was like.
What was the
experience of the crucifixion scene like?
When I was on the
cross, I was in a loincloth in incredibly cold
conditions. They stick heaters on both sides of you,
but it’s useless when the wind just blows past you.
I would look out and see a good hundreds of crew
members, shaking from the cold, with mittens and
scarves and jackets on. And there’s nothing you can
do because your arms are tied up. So they move the
heaters closer, and you start to feel the heat, but
when the wind slows down just a little bit it fries
your skin off. I remember just calling out to God at
one point, “So you don’t want this movie to be
made?”
One time I was up
there for an hour, and because of the wind chill, I
had difficulty keeping my core temperature up. It
was extremely hard, and I was getting nauseous all
the time.
Also, because the
makeup was so severe I couldn’t see out of my right
eye, which caused me to hyper-focus out of the left
eye. Because of all the makeup I was wearing, my
skin was just ripped to shreds. It was like the
healing stages after a sunburn, when you want to
itch every single part of your body and you can’t.
As a result of
playing this part, I have become even more
passionate about the Way of the Cross. It is about
Our Lord’s sacrifice for mankind, for our sins,
bringing us back to God, and it’s love that did
this.
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