Jump to content
The World News Media

‘Risen’ Actor Reveals Details of Pivotal Scene When Roman Guard He Played Tearfully Admits What Really Happened at Christ’s Tomb on Easter Morning


TheWorldNewsOrg

Recommended Posts

  • Member

Even on the silver screen, where moving images are the key to storytelling, every now and then what directors choose not to show their audiences makes all the difference.

In those instances — think Quint’s riveting U.S.S. Indianapolis monologue in “Jaws” — the mind and imagination of the viewer provides the visuals, and that typically jumpstarts a more visceral and primal moviegoing experience.

A similar storytelling style works brilliantly in “Risen,” a celluloid yarn that in one very critical way communicates more by what it doesn’t show than by what it does.

The action begins on the day of Jesus Christ’s crucifixion but takes off on Easter Sunday with the pursuit of his missing body. And the film, which released to DVD Tuesday, comes from the perspective of Clavius, a Roman military officer (Joseph Fiennes) who sealed Christ’s tomb and now quite naturally finds himself in hot water with Pontius Pilate.

Image source: YouTube/Sony

Joseph Fiennes plays the Roman officer Clavius, here investigating Chris’s empty tomb. (Image source: YouTube/Sony)

The idea that Christ actually rose from the dead is the furthest thing from Clavius’ mind — as far as he’s concerned, a body is missing, and all he wants to do is find it.

Which brings us to a pivotal scene: Clavius has just tracked down in a tavern one of the two soldiers he tasked with guarding Christ’s tomb. He hasn’t seen the soldier since leaving him at the burial site the night before the Nazarene’s body went missing, and now Clavius wants the truth.

— Spoiler Alert —

Both guards went to the Jewish leaders for sanctuary Easter morning, and Clavius learned they were pardoned by Pilate and paid off to parrot the party line: Christ’s “rabid” disciples came in the night, overpowered the guards and stole his body.

But Clavius isn’t buying another retelling of the canned explanation and gets to some pointed interrogation at a tavern table, knocking over the guard’s drink and grabbing him by the scruff of his collar:

How did the stone fall 10 paces from the tomb when it took seven men, myself included, just to roll it closed? The ropes weren’t cut; they were torn as if thread; the seal melted like butter. Shall we go there?

Image source: YouTube/Sony

Richard Atwill plays the guard who finally comes clean about what happened at Christ’s tomb. (Image source: YouTube/Sony)

The guard (played by Richard Atwill) becomes frightened at this prospect and finally comes clean.

It’s not a wild proposition that the creators of “Risen” could have depicted the actual resurrection — but wisely they didn’t. Instead they have Atwell’s character describe it. And his is a spellbinding, moment-by-moment account of what his own eyes beheld — through tears and trembling — that leaves viewers to create their own images from his words:

We was wakened by this terrible…this terrible…this terrible flash. The night was gone. The air smelled burned. And the ropes they just…they just exploded. And the stone flew like a leaf, and all of a sudden the sun…rose in the tomb. It was the sun. It was…it was everything. And then a figure…a figure appeared. I could not gaze upon him. The terrible light. And it wasn’t a man. It wasn’t. And there was this voice all around, I could not fathom. And then we were running. We ran so far…so far…until we…until we could think again. And then we went and told the priests because that’s what you bade us do.

The guard had a front-row seat for the universe-altering event of all time, and he doesn’t describe it as a gentle, white-robed, neat-and-clean happening. It was loud, violent, terrifying and otherworldly — not at all unlike the biblical idea of humans falling dead in the presence of God.

TheBlaze caught up with Atwill who shared what went into his pivotal, powerful scene with Fiennes.

Atwill said he and director Kevin Reynolds talked “before the shoot about how this was a real turning point for Joe’s character. We had to make sure that there was something in the recollection of the resurrection that made [Clavius] contemplate the fact that everything he has believed up to this point was untrue and there was another reality that he was yet to discover.”

Image source: YouTube/Sony

Clavius now knows the guard is telling the truth. (Image source: YouTube/Sony)

So Atwill had the challenging job of describing the actual resurrection — and during the retelling he practically comes unglued. To get to that emotional place, Atwill told TheBlaze he “tried to imagine how I would’ve felt if I had witnessed what was described in the scene” — and then everything after.

“I would’ve been sentenced to death and then pardoned and then had to cope with having seen the most incredible thing but being forbidden to tell anyone at pain of death,” Atwill shared. “It’s a pretty unsettling set of circumstances.”

Amid the guard’s description of the resurrection, the countenance of the once-skeptical Clavius changes completely — and he looks even a bit unsettled at this new prospect. He almost certainly believes the guard no longer is lying.

Atwill explained that his character “is separated from all that he knows and no one has asked him, on a personal level, what he is feeling. He knows he shouldn’t, but he desperately wants to tell the truth — and in this scene he is given the chance to do so.”

Here’s the scene:

Read more stories from TheBlaze

See What Trump Did When He Was Reportedly Told He Didn’t Have Enough Time for the National Anthem At His Rally

Santorum Reveals the One Issue That Led Him to Support Trump ‘100 Percent’

CNN Host Rips Trump for Floating ‘Shameful’ Vince Foster Conspiracy Theory ‘Untethered to Reality’

Watch Moment BLM Protesters Interrupt Milo Yiannopoulos Event — and See How Security Responds

‘Let Him Speak!’: School Board Candidate Silenced, Hauled Away by Police During LGBT Meeting

Source

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Views 349
  • Replies 0
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Popular Days

Top Posters In This Topic

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...




×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Service Confirmation Terms of Use Privacy Policy Guidelines We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.