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dixieagle
Guest
Simply wonderful analysis!!!6 reasons Catholics should see this film:
Too many modern films show sex as morally neutral, to be graded only on whether it was pleasurable or not. Les Miserables may be the only movie of 2012/2013 that shows sex without love as ultimately degrading to the individual. Fantine’s song, where she sings of broken dreams after a degrading and loveless sexual act she does to stay alive and provide for her child, is heartbreaking. How many hit pop songs about going to the nightclub to party night after night will teenage girls hear with THAT message?
Every cleric and nun shown in the film is shown in a favorable light. Every church, church home, abbey, and hospital is shown as a place of refuge and healing. The crucifix is omnipresent and is always shown and treated with reverence, and living with faith, charity, hope, and obedience to God is treated as THE most important thing in life. When was the last time you saw all THAT in a Hollywood film?
If you liked “The Fugitive,” this is much better. The creator of the original series based it on Les Miserables. (The film even included its own version of the chase through the sewer.)
The end of the film could function as the equivalent of the Voight-Kampf test used to detect unfeeling replicants in “Blade Runner” - if you don’t tear up a little, what’s wrong with you? A good cry is good for the soul.
After watching umpteen films last year about superheroes wearing spandex, you can see that Jean Valjean is the Catholic superhero - he has a secret origin and a secret identity, he has super strength (forced labor will do that for you, if you survive) he is continually tested morally and makes the right decision even when it is difficult and life threatening, he has a powerful and implacable arch-nemess, and his superpower is his desire to live his life in accordance with Christ and do right by his fellow man.
This film could inspire endless discussions about theology among Catholics. For instance, the comparison between Javert and Valjean - both characters are called upon not only to forgive, but to accept the forgiveness of others - Valjean accepts the forgiveness of his actions and the mercy shown by the Bishop (and through him, by Jesus), forgives those who sinned against him, and is redeemed through his love of others, by the grace of God. Javert, who is explicitly shown as Christian as well (but of a very ascetic cast more focused on justice more than mercy) cannot forgive others, cannot accept the possibility of the mercy and forgiveness Valjean offers him, and breaks (trying to avoid spoilers, here). Javert’s sin is that of Judas, whose greatest sin was not the betrayal of our Lord (Peter did that too, on a lesser scale), but whose sin against the Holy Spirit lay in failing to accept that even he could be forgiven. Sometimes, accepting the possibility that we could be forgiven is harder than forgiving others.