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What? Skeleton of the most famous Musketeer, D'Artagnan, possibly discovered in Dutch church closet.
Dumas picked four names of real musketeers out of a history book, D'Artagnan, Athos, Aramis, and Porthos. So there was an actual D'Artagnan, though he made most of the story up. (Or, you know, all of it.)*
Charles de Batz de Castelmore, known as d'Artagnan, the famous musketeer of Kings Louis XIII and Louis XIV, spent his life in the service of the French crown.
The Gascon nobleman inspired Alexandre Dumas's hero in "The Three Musketeers" in the 19th century, a character now known worldwide thanks to the novel and numerous film adaptations.
D'Artagnan was killed during the siege of Maastricht in 1673, and there is a statue honoring the musketeer in the city. His final resting place has remained a mystery ever since.

A lot of Dumas's stories are based on bits of real history. The plot of the >Three Musketeers, about trying to recover lost diamonds from the queen's necklace, was cribbed from the then-almost-contemporaneous Affair of the Queen's Necklace. And the Man in the Iron Mask is based on real accounts of a prisoner forced to wear a mask (though I think it was a velvet mask).
* Oh, I should mention, Dumas says all this, about finding the names in an old book, in the prologue to his novel. But authors lie a lot. They frequently present fictions as based on historic fact. The twist is, he was actually telling the truth here. At least about these four musketeers having actually existed and served under Louis XIV.
Fun fact: You know the beginning of A Fistful of Dollars where the local gunslingers make fun of Clint Eastwood's donkey and Eastwood demands they apologize to the donkey? That's lifted from The Three Musketeers. Rochefort mocks D'Artagnan's old, brokedown farm horse and D'Artagnan is incensed.
A commenter asked which should be read first, The Hobbit of LOTR?
Easy, no question -- read The Hobbit first. It's actually the start of the story and comes first chronologically. It sets up some major characters and major pieces in play in LOTR.
Also, the Hobbit is Beginner-Friendly, which LOTR isn't. The Hobbit really is a delightful book, and a fast read. It's chatty, it's casual, it's exciting, and it's funny. In that dry cheeky British humor way. I love that the narrator is constantly making little asides and commentary, like he's just sitting next to you telling you this story as it occurs to him.
LOTR is a very long story. Fifteen hundred pages or so. The Hobbit is relatively short and very punchy and easy to read. If you don't like The Hobbit, you can skip out on LOTR. If you do like it, you'll be primed to read LOTR.
Oh, I should say: The Hobbit is written as if it's for children, but one of those smart children's stories that are also for adults. Don't worry, there's also real fighting and violence and horror in it, too.
LOTR is written for adults. (It's said that Tolkien wrote both for his children, but LOTR was written 17 years later, when his children were adults.) Some might not like The Hobbit due to its sometimes frivolous tone. Me, I love it. I find it constantly amusing. Both are really good but there is a starkly different tone to both. LOTR is epic, grand, and serious, about a world war, The Hobbit is light and breezy, and about a heist. Though a heist that culminates in a war for the spoils.
The Hobbit Challenge: Read two more chapters. I didn't have much time. Bilbo got the ring.
I noticed a continuity problem. Maybe. Now, as of the time of The Hobbit, it was unknown that this magic ring was in fact a Ring of Power, and it was doubly unknown that it was the Ring of Power, the Master Ring that controlled the others.
But the narrator -- who we will learn in LOTR was none of than Bilbo himself, who wrote the book as "There and Back Again" -- says this about Gollum's ring:
"But who knows how Gollum had come by that present [the Ring], ages ago in the old days when such rings were still at large in the world? Perhaps even the Master who ruled them could not have said."
In another passage, the ring is identified as a "ring of power."
I don't know, I always thought there was a distinction between mere magic rings and the Rings of Power created by Sauron. But this suggests that Bilbo knew this was a ring of power created by Sauron.
Now I don't remember when Bilbo wrote the Hobbit. In the movie, he shows Frodo the book in Rivendell, and I guess he wrote it after he left the Shire. I guess he might have added in the part about the ring being a ring of power created by "the Master" after Gandalf appraised him of his research into the ring.
I never noticed this before. I know Tolkien re-wrote this chapter while he was writing LOTR to make the ring important from the start. And also to make Gollum more sinister and evil, and also to remove the part where Gollum actually offers Bilbo the ring as a "present" -- Bilbo had already found it on his own, but Gollum was wiling to give it away, which obviously is not something the rewritten Gollum would ever do.
But I had no memory of the ring being suggested to be The Ring so early in the tale.
Finish the job, Mr. President!
Melanie Phillips lays out the case for the total destruction of the Iranian government and armed forces. [CBD]
CJN podcast 1400 copy.jpg
Podcast: Sefton and CBD talk about how would a peace treaty with Iran work, Democrats defending murderers and rapists, The GOP vs. Dem bench for 2028, composting bodies? And more!
Oh, I forgot to mention this quote from Pete Hegseth, reported by Roger Kimball: "We are sharing the ocean with the Iranian Navy. We're giving them the bottom half."
Forgotten 80s Mystery Click: Red Leather Suit and Sweatband Edition
And I was here to please
I'm even on knees
Makin' love to whoever I please
I gotta do it my way
Or no way at all
Tomorrow is March 25th, "Tolkien Reading Day," because March 25th is the day when the Ring is destroyed in the book. I think I'm going to start the Hobbit tomorrow and read all four books this time.
The only bad part of the trilogy are the Frodo/Sam chapters in The Two Towers. They're repetitive, slow, and mostly about the weather and terrain. But most everything else is good. Weirdly, the Frodo-Sam chapters in Return of the King are exciting and action-packed and among the best in the trilogy. (Though the chapters with everyone else in Return of the King get pretty slow again. Mostly people talking about marching towards war, and then marching towards war.)
Forgotten 80s Mystery Click
One day I'm gonna write a poem in a letter
One day I'm gonna get that faculty together
Remember that everybody has to wait in line
Oh, [Song Title], look out world, oh, you know I've got mine
US decimation of Iran's ICBM forces is due to Space Force's instant detection of launches -- and the launchers' hiding places -- and rapid counter-attack via missiles
AI is doing a lot of the work in analyzing images to find the exact hiding place of the launchers. Counter-strikes are now coming in four hours after a launch, whereas previously it might have taken days for humans to go over the imagery and data.
Robert Mueller, Former Special Counsel Who Probed Trump, Dies
“robert mueller just died,” trump wrote in a truth social post on march 21. “good, i’m glad he’s dead. he can no longer hurt innocent people! president donald j. trump.”
Canadian School Designates Cafeteria And Lunchroom As "No Food Zones" For Ramadan
Canada and the UK are neck and neck in the race to become the first western country to fall to Islam [CBD]
CJN podcast 1400 copy.jpg
Podcast: Sefton and CBD have a short chat about Iran, the disgusting SAVE Act theater, Mamdani's politicizing of St. Patrick's Day, and more!
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« Hollywood Finally Starts Cranking Out the Morale-Boosting Propaganda Pics... On Behalf of the Islamist Terrorists | Main | Car Talk With Saddam Hussein »
July 01, 2004

The Passion of the Oliver Stone

Remember back when the left was so furiously anxious that The Passion of the Christ would inflame worldwide passions against Jews?

For my part, I sympathized with those concerns -- which were, and remain, quite real.

But it's a difficult call-- can one say that the most important part of the Christian religion should never be filmed because of the tendency that it might inflame anti-Jewish feelings?


There seems to be a lot of misinformation about the Christian religion floating around out there, most of it offered in condemnation of Gibson's film. For example, NY Post reviewer Jonathan Foreman asked why couldn't Mel Gibson make a happy, uplifting story about "Christ's teachings and philosophy," which he deemed, without any evidence, to be the "true" message of Christianity.

With all due respect: Christ's teachings are not, in fact, the "true" or central part of Christianity. His sacrifice and death on the cross in order to redeem mankind is the central story of Christianity, and that's simply not going to change, no matter how many times it's asserted that "being kind to your neighbors" or "protecting the environment" is the religion's central message.

Not even Christ's Resurrection is as important as his death, theologically speaking. The Resurrection is evidence (if you believe in that sort of thing) that Christ was the Son of God. But humanity was offered salvation by His death, not by His resurrection. The death is the climax of the plot, in fiction terms. The teachings are a preamble and the resurrection is an epilogue. Either could be deleted without compromising the main point of the religion.

So that presents us with what the lawyers call a "hard case." Undeniably, a film featuring Jews as accomplices in Christ's death cannot help but to inflame anti-Jewish passions among the more troglodytic citizens of the world.

On the other hand, we're not talking about a minor little part of the Christian religion here; we're talking about the sum and entirety of it, the big magillah, the sine qua non. The whole ball of wax.

The question is squarely presented, and it cannot be nicely finessed by postulating that there's no reason to film this particular episode of Christ's life: It's the most important episode of His life. To what extent, then, should a religion ignore or edit its central teachings in order to spare the very-real and unavoidable effect that teaching might have on Jews, or any other minority?

Taxi Driver had the potential to incite madman to commit assassinations (and, actually, that potential was realized); but can we say this film shouldn't have been made because of that predictable consequence?

It's a difficult question, for me at least, balancing the value of art against genuine human misery and death. But it wasn't a difficult question at all for the left or for Hollywood, which was quite insistent that The Passion should never have been made.

Now comes the Crusader film and two Alexander the Great pics. Both will inflame Muslim passions against Westerners, just as surely as The Passion of the Christ inflamed Muslim passions against Jews. And yet Hollywood doesn't seem to have any reservations about making these films, now does it?

What accounts for this? And no-- I'm not making any kind of anti-Semitic suggestion here; I'm as pro-Jew as a non-Jew could possibly be.

I'm not saying Hollywood is controlled by Jews, nor, even if it were, that would there be anything objectionable about that. (And it's not, by the way.)

I am, however, saying Hollywood is largely controlled by people who don't have any particular affinity for the security or interests of the United States of America, or even for the Western civilization that makes them multimillionaires.

The difference between the treatment of The Passion -- blacklisted by Hollywood -- and the current crop of pro-jihadi films can only be explained by one simple fact: Hollywood is sensitive to the safety of and regard of the world's Jewry-- which is quite proper and laudable. Hollywood can be proud that it was so concerned about the likely anti-semitic passions that would be inflamed by Gibson's film; all thinking people should be so concerned. (Which is not to dictate one's ultimate opinion on the film; it's just to say everyone should be concerned about, and aware of, the likely effect of the film on Jews.)

Hollywood, however, is not sensitive at all to the safety of and regard for Americans. If there are a lot of producers balking at this crop of feel-good "kill the Infidels" blockbusters, I haven't heard of them. Frank Rich was slamming The Passion in pre-production; I don't think I've read him similarly condeming these anti-Western movies.

I think Frank Rich can be praised for being concerned about anti-semitism. I think his tactics were noxious, but his basic concerns over anti-semitism aren't something he can be fairly criticized about.

I just wonder why he doesn't have anywhere near that level of concern about anti-Americanism.

And don't tell me I have to "wait to see the movies" before passing judgment. I already know the Crusader film features its viewpoint character/hero killing the Western infidels; that sort of clues me in that the Western infidels aren't going to be portrayed particularly sympathetically.

And besides-- Frank Rich didn't wait to see The Passion before condemning it. He knew the basic plot, and that was enough for him.

If The Passion of the Christ is to be condemned for subjecting the world's Jews to additional hatred and violence, at least that condemnation is mitigated by the fact that it presents a story that is at the heart of one of the world's greatest religions, and that story is difficult to change for purposes of avoiding anti-semitic responses. I'm not sure how one could make it less inflamatory against Jews, other than setting it in a fictitious, mythical land, like Shargri-La or Xanadu.

But I do know that there's no equally potent reason to make an anti-Crusader film at this parlous moment-- unless anti-Americanism or anti-Westernism have also become two of the world's great religions, which, sadly enough, I think they just might now be.

posted by Ace at 06:52 PM