Kribu
Administrator
From the little I remember from the BBC TV version, and from some of the books I semi-read later, I - as a person with no religious background - didn't feel any of it was "shoving Christianity in my face". Being older and somewhat more knowledgeable of Christian mythology now, I can and could see the parallels, yes... but I would think that for non-Christian kids, i.e. kids that haven't been brought up with this mythology, it wouldn't really need to be toned down.
It would be just a story for them, I assume, a fairy-tale (and nearly all fairy-tales have some mythological elements in them, and loads of parallels and allegories understandable for grown-ups and older kids, but not necessarily to the youngest viewers/readers who have not been brought up with that background). As long as the parallels with Christianity aren't painfully clearly pointed out (i.e. narrator: and this here is Aslan, a Christ-figure etc), I wouldn't see it as shoving Christianity on the viewers or needing to be toned down.
The people and kids already familiar with Christianity would get the allegories and parallels, and most of them would probably not mind. The kids not familiar with Christianity probably wouldn't "get" them and would look at it as a cool story. I suppose some parents might object, but I've really heard much, much more about Christian parents objecting to their kids seeing/reading "bad" stuff than about non-Christian parents objecting to voluntary entertainment (it's not like watching the movie would be mandatory) having Christian parallels.
And even if the Christian parallels were clear enough for non-Christians (I assume Christians won't mind them being there), I can't see it really turning off too many of the target group (which would still be kids, I guess). As I said above - it would still just be a fairy-tale to them.
I'm quite looking forward to the movie, I think. And being a proper atheist and all, I really don't expect or want the religious overtones to be removed from the story - I mean, they do kind of carry the story and all.
It would be just a story for them, I assume, a fairy-tale (and nearly all fairy-tales have some mythological elements in them, and loads of parallels and allegories understandable for grown-ups and older kids, but not necessarily to the youngest viewers/readers who have not been brought up with that background). As long as the parallels with Christianity aren't painfully clearly pointed out (i.e. narrator: and this here is Aslan, a Christ-figure etc), I wouldn't see it as shoving Christianity on the viewers or needing to be toned down.
The people and kids already familiar with Christianity would get the allegories and parallels, and most of them would probably not mind. The kids not familiar with Christianity probably wouldn't "get" them and would look at it as a cool story. I suppose some parents might object, but I've really heard much, much more about Christian parents objecting to their kids seeing/reading "bad" stuff than about non-Christian parents objecting to voluntary entertainment (it's not like watching the movie would be mandatory) having Christian parallels.
And even if the Christian parallels were clear enough for non-Christians (I assume Christians won't mind them being there), I can't see it really turning off too many of the target group (which would still be kids, I guess). As I said above - it would still just be a fairy-tale to them.
I'm quite looking forward to the movie, I think. And being a proper atheist and all, I really don't expect or want the religious overtones to be removed from the story - I mean, they do kind of carry the story and all.