THE PASSION OF APOCALYPTO: Metaphor of "End Times" Prophecy Raises Questions About a Blockbuster's Impact on Audiences

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Buzz is building for Mel Gibson's Dec. 8 release of Apocalypto[trailer]. The film's actual plot is still a bit of a secret. Judging by the title and the focus on the decline of the Mayan civilization, Gibson is offering a metaphor for "the end times." Like Gibson's Passion, the movie is likely to serve as a rallying point for Evangelicals, especially after the recent election and other events have taken some of the wind out of the Evangelical movement.

Yet what effects is a movie with a clear, if not symbolic, political and social message likely to have on audiences? To contextualize some of these effects, see these past columns I did for Skeptical Inquirer Online evaluating the impacts of The Day After Tomorrow and The Passion of the Christ.

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I refuse to see Mel Gibson's snuff film Passion because I'm pretty sure that Gibson has flipped his lid and I have no desire to see a guy in a rubber suit get flogged for 2 hours.
I've written before about Hutton Gibson (Mel Gibson's father) and serious crank, conspiracy theorist and proud Holocaust denier
Mel Gibson broke off relations with recently departed actor Heath Ledger after he spurned Gibson's advice not to accept the role of a gay cowboy in "Brokeback Mountain." ... "Ledger asked Gibson whether he should take the role of Ennis Del Mar in 'Brokeback,'"...
I'm sure everyone knows by now that Mel Gibson was arrested for drunk driving on Friday. When he was arrested, he was apparently quite belligerant and ranted at the officers arresting him, threatening them and hurling anti-semitic slurs.

Is that really Mel Gibson's picture or a computer morph of Gibson and Saddam Hussein?