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The Passover Plot

  • 1976
  • PG
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
3.8/10
175
YOUR RATING
The Passover Plot (1976)
Drama

Dramatization of the controversial best-seller that posits an alternate version of the birth of Christianity. In this version, Jesus planned for His crucifixion by taking a drug that would s... Read allDramatization of the controversial best-seller that posits an alternate version of the birth of Christianity. In this version, Jesus planned for His crucifixion by taking a drug that would simulate death. After His unconscious body was placed in the tomb, a religious sect known a... Read allDramatization of the controversial best-seller that posits an alternate version of the birth of Christianity. In this version, Jesus planned for His crucifixion by taking a drug that would simulate death. After His unconscious body was placed in the tomb, a religious sect known as the Zealots would secretly steal Christ's body from the tomb, then spread the rumor that... Read all

  • Director
    • Michael Campus
  • Writers
    • Paul Golding
    • Millard Cohan
    • Patricia Louisianna Knop
  • Stars
    • Harry Andrews
    • Hugh Griffith
    • Zalman King
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.8/10
    175
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Campus
    • Writers
      • Paul Golding
      • Millard Cohan
      • Patricia Louisianna Knop
    • Stars
      • Harry Andrews
      • Hugh Griffith
      • Zalman King
    • 9User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos16

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Harry Andrews
    Harry Andrews
    • Yohanan the Baptist
    Hugh Griffith
    Hugh Griffith
    • Caiaphas
    Zalman King
    Zalman King
    • Yeshua of Nazareth
    Donald Pleasence
    Donald Pleasence
    • Pontius Pilate
    Scott Wilson
    Scott Wilson
    • Judah
    Daniel Ades
    • Andros
    • (as Dan Ades)
    Michael Baseleon
    Michael Baseleon
    • Mattai
    Lewis Van Bergen
    Lewis Van Bergen
    • Yoram
    William Paul Burns
    William Paul Burns
    • Shimon
    • (as William Burns)
    Dan Hedaya
    Dan Hedaya
    • Yaocov
    • (as Daniel Hedaya)
    Helena Kallianiotes
    Helena Kallianiotes
    • A Visionary Woman
    Kevin O'Connor
    • Irijah
    Robert Walker Jr.
    Robert Walker Jr.
    • Bar Talmi
    • (as Robert Walker)
    William Watson
    William Watson
    • Roman Captain
    Moti Baharav
    • Zealot
    • (as Motti Baharev)
    Shimon Bar
    Peter Frye
    • Herod Antipas
    Max Goldberg
    • Director
      • Michael Campus
    • Writers
      • Paul Golding
      • Millard Cohan
      • Patricia Louisianna Knop
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    3.8175
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    Featured reviews

    7BB-15

    A unique film, In spite of many problems

    What is the good and the bad about the Passover Plot? Starting with the positive, since history describes Pilate as a brutal ruler, this is the most accurate portrayal of Pilate on film. Next the movie accurately shows the oppression of the Jewish people in Judea by the Romans and the longing of most of the people to be free of Roman domination. The film explains that the Romans could not understand the Jewish religion and for that many of the Jewish people could not tolerate the Romans. The movie also explains that under Roman law no one could rule a province unless they were appointed by the Emperor. Also, the music is appropriate, as were the sets and costumes. There are some pretty scenes and sometimes a decent use of the camera. Donald Pleasence as Pilate was very effective in his portrayal.

    The film has many problems because of the script. Keeping track of the supporting characters is made difficult first because the Hebrew names are used instead of English versions. Second, the script often has supporting characters almost always appearing with no explanation. The central part of the movie will often cut to new characters with no setup about who they are. So, the middle part of the film has a series of disjointed speeches.

    The story from the book involves a secret plan to try and fool the Romans. This should lead to suspense in an adaptation about whether this scheme will work but there is no tension in the screen version which points to poor directing. The director doesn't know how to keep the audience involved with the secret maneuvering by Jesus. Overall while the book is about a careful plan, the film doesn't show that there is much of a plan at all.

    Some of the acting and directing was mediocre at the level of a TV movie. One jarring moment was when the color was reversed in a few shots trying to look more avant garde when this is supposed to be an historical epic.

    However, in spite of all the problems, the film has moments, more than any other, in accurately showing life in Roman occupied first century Judea. And for that, I rate it 7/10.
    2moondog-8

    Cinema Ambien

    I remember going to this movie on a Saturday night with 3 friends. There were protesters outside, so we were ready for something thought-provoking and controversial. There wasn't an empty seat in the house by the time the lights dimmed. But sadly, this film was so boring that people could be heard snoring at different locations around the theater after the first hour. It's that badly scripted and executed. You haven't missed much.
    7tomsview

    Devine or delusional?

    I find the less mainstream interpretations of the life of Christ intriguing, they make you think.

    "The Last Temptation of Christ" (1988), "The Body" (2001), "Risen" (2016), "Mary Magdalene" (2018), even "Jesus Christ Superstar" all challenged the traditional view. However none challenged it quite like "The Passover Plot". Inspired by Hugh Schonfield's book, it posits that Jesus planned to survive the cross without divine intervention - just a bit of trickery.

    There were violent protests over "Last Temptation" with its relationship between Jesus and Mary Magdalene, but I don't recall too much fuss over "The Passover Plot"; sex outweighs blasphemy any day.

    It was filmed in Israel but there really aren't any big scenes with thousand of extras. That sort of thing was left to "King of Kings". Here, it's the story, the unexpected focus and the words that make it compelling.

    Where it does go big is in the music by Alex North, a contender for the best film composer of all time. His score is sharp and percussive; it helps give the drama grit.

    "The Passover Plot" paints a fascinating picture of Jesus as far more welded to the politics and lifestyle of the Jews of ancient Israel. In this telling, a paranoid Pontius Pilate is the main persecutor of Jesus; no washing of hands this time. Where I think "Plot" starts to go off course is in the connection Jesus has to the zealots and the violence. By the end, I don't feel the film is on very solid ground with the over-elaborate crucifixion scam, arresting and all as it is.

    What happened to, "Love your enemies", "Turn the other cheek" and "Forgive those who trespass against you"?

    The problem with many revisionists, if they even allow that Jesus existed, is the assertion that such sayings were patched onto the story. They date the gospels to so much later than the time of Christ that you'd almost be forgiven for thinking they were written by Jules Verne. And any ancient non-canonical mention of Jesus is simply put down as interpolations by decades of fraudulent friars.

    Maybe "Occam's Razor" cuts to the truth - the simplest answer is likely to be the correct one - the Gospels by-and-large recount real events.

    But Thomas Aquinas could have the last word on that, "To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible".
    5Bry-2

    Demands a re-release

    Of course this film -- made over thirty years ago to exploit a controversial theory -- has been all but forgotten until very recently. But if The Da Vinci Code (2006) is as popular as the book -- and it looks like that's a possibility -- then this should be re-released, or shown on The History Channel or presented on DVD by a decent company, with Da Vinci Code tie-ins and all.

    The book this is from, with the same title, by Hugo Schoenfeld, is very good, well researched and well thought-out. Another complementary title (and one the Da Vinci Code is accused of stealing from) is Baigent, Leigh and Lincoln's Holy Blood, Holy Grail. All three are recommended to religious conspiracy/heresy fans, like me, although The Da Vinci Code itself is the worst written of the trio.
    6Bunuel1976

    THE PASSOVER PLOT (Michael Campus, 1976) **1/2

    This flashy adaptation of a controversial book on the true nature of Jesus Christ should have been "The Da Vinci Code" of its day; unfortunately, its sheer rarity (the copy I acquired suffered from 'combing' issues for the film's entire duration) has, instead, all but ensured that it forgotten over the years! That said, the popular and ultra-reverent TV mini-series Jesus OF NAZARETH (1977) could well have been commissioned as an 'antidote' to this one (actually the two display a comparably realistic view of Biblical times)! Still, its theme is certainly fascinating – theorizing that Christ was not really the Son of God but merely a man who was deluded into thinking himself the savior of his people. It is interesting that the Old Testament is full of quotes by established prophets telling what was to be expected of the eventual Messiah…so, it follows, that it was easy enough for some ambitious man to perform just those tasks and be taken for Him (consequently, Jesus' powers as a miracle-maker get just one brief, almost casual manifestation early on)! Incidentally, this is partly a Jewish production, therefore the characters adopt their Hebrew pronunciation – so that Jesus becomes Yeshua, John (The Baptist) Yohanan, Judas (Iscariot) is now Judah and Bartholomew gets saddled with the amusing name of Bar Talmi! Zalman King (of all people – in view of his later association with softcore efforts in both Film and TV!) approaches the role of Jesus with his customary intensity, which is quite incongruous with the figure of Christ as laid down in the Scriptures!; however, this is complemented by Michael Campus' unwarranted tricksy direction (full of slow-motion passages and even baffling instances of negative printing)! The rest of the cast is peppered with familiar faces and some fine actors: Harry Andrews (John The Baptist), Hugh Griffith (Caiaphas), Dan Hedaya (as Jacob, brother to Jesus!), Donald Pleasence (who, having already portrayed The Devil in THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD [1965], now assumes the mantle of Pontius Pilate – though played in strictly stock-villain terms and shown to be in cahoots with the Jewish High Priests!), Robert Walker Jr. (Bartholomew) and Scott Wilson (Judas). The latter, however, gets as much of a radical make-over as Christ himself: part of a warring rabble (led presumably by Barabbas, though he is never actually named), Judas is asked to join Jesus' peace-mongering throng in order to bring the two parties together! The famous commotion at the temple, then, is depicted here as a deliberate act (abetted by a similar disruption elsewhere by Barabbas & Co. to distract the Romans) so that Christ can then proclaim himself King Of The Jews and rally support on-the-spot for their cause of overthrowing the Roman regime! However, Jesus also has a back-up plan: ordering Judas to betray him(!) so that he can be condemned and crucified…but, believing himself capable of withstanding the multiple beatings and body-piercings and, having feigned death through a special drug concocted by physician Jacob(!), he can be 'resurrected' after a couple of days and thus accomplish the greatest faith-boosting miracle of all!! Obviously, the first option fails and Jesus has to resort to the second (which sees him on trial before Caiaphas and Pilate but not Herod Antipas, scenes which typically command particular attention)…but, then, he fails to make it and dies just the same in the arms of Jacob (Simon Peter, by the way, gets a downgrading here as well) and Judas (who, needless to say, is not required to hang himself since Jesus' death was not his doing)! The script's tendency to cut corners through the events in Christ's 'recorded' life emerges as the most unsatisfying aspect of the film…though it does try to cauterize the wounds as it were (no pun intended) by stating that since the Four Gospels were written several years after the 'fact', they were mostly hearsay (i.e. unable to be proved) anyway! Thankfully, Alex North (a veteran of Hollywood epics such as SPARTACUS [1960] and CLEOPATRA [1963]) supplies a nice score for this – even if it too comes across, at times, as inappropriately rousing (given the radical stance adopted throughout).

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    • Trivia
      Donald Pleasence came up with the idea of Pontius Pilate eating dates. Whilst researching the role, Pleasence found that the real Pilate was addicted to eating dates dipped in syrup.

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • 1976 (Israel)
    • Countries of origin
      • Israel
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Jesus von Nazareth
    • Filming locations
      • Israel
    • Production companies
      • Atlas Film
      • Coast Industries
      • Golan-Globus Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 48m(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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