
I recently watched LoB for only the second time, and the first time in a decade, and, apart from its brilliance and wonderful pace, the latter of which I'd doubted the first time around, I was most struck by the degree to which the film seemed to sympathize with the Romans, at the expense of the Jews (and thus, implicitly, with its subsequent spin-off, British Christianity. Consider:
- The stoning of (extremely mild) blasphemers, including the local Jewish authority figure, while bored Roman troops roll their eyes.
- The hatred between the People's Front of Judea and the Judean People's Front, peaking in the melee inside the Roman Palace.
- The entire "What have the Romans ever done for us?" skit.
- The entire Brian-as-messiah plot.
- The fetishization of martyrdom (albeit a more Christian than Jewish idea).
- The fact that Jesus is shown, but only briefly at the beginning and then disappears, is inherently satirical, or at the very least realistic for the time.
Sure, various Romans are lampooned also (Pilate's lisp, the cluelessness of various centurions), but in far gentler and goofy rather than satirical ways (the "what have the Romans ever done for us" skit, is, I think the inarguably most biting bit in the whole). And in the end, Cleese's centurion (who knows that there is a Brian slated to be executed, and attempts to free him on Pilate's order) comes across as the only halfway-competent figure around - even the more or less sensible Brian can't talk or run his way out of being put to death (the horror of which, in another point for the Romans, is massively downplayed - guess the public wasn't ready for real crucifixion humor).
Granted, some or most of this might well have been accidental - the feuding between the PJF and the JPF was doubtless intended as a satire of bickering left-wing 1960s factions far more than as a critique of monotheism. But as immediate contexts fade away, timeless humor and masterful comedy filmmaking remains, and whether by partial design or total accident (one can hardly, after all, make a truly subversive satire without painting the nominal antagonists in a flattering light), my impression of the film was that it definitely holds that the era's Romans were smarter and more civilized than the Jews.
Anyone else had similar thoughts/wonderings?
