Posted on 10/24/2011 5:24:20 AM PDT by Kaslin
here are a lot of reasons why people know the name Emilio Estevez. Some know him because his father is Martin Sheen and his brother is Charlie Sheen. Others know him for playing the jock in The Breakfast Club. Still others know him for his work playing coach Gordon Bombay in The Mighty Ducks series. Even others know him for the many other films that he's acted in or directed over the years.
However, his new film "The Way" shows a different side of Estevez than many of us have seen before. Written and directed by the famous actor, the film explores the spiritual path of a man who is mourning the death of his own son. I recently had the opportunity to interview Estevez about his new film.
"The Way" features Martin Sheen as Tom, a doctor who has little time to travel with his adventurous son, Daniel (Estevez). However, when Daniel dies suddenly, Tom decides to continue his sons path and take a pilgrimage from France to Spain on the path known as the Camino de Santiago, otherwise known as The Way of Saint James."
Estevez told me that the idea for the film came to him from his son. Several years ago, his son was traveling with Estevezs father in Spain and met the love of his life. His son eventually married the woman he met there and settled down in Spain. With that in mind, Estevez decided to make a movie there so that he could spend more time with his son.
In writing the story, Estevez also wanted to create a film for his Dad. He told me that he wanted to write a movie and create a character for my father that he would be proud of in a film that he would go see.
The spiritual journey that Tom is on in the film also hit home for Estevez personally. He called the film an expression of the spiritual path that Im on, and noted that exploring his own faith was a wonderful byproduct of the process. Growing up, he said, there was little talk about spirituality in his house but a lot of talk about religion. Religion, he said, had a negative connotation for him because of all of the arguments he heard about the subject growing up. In fact, Estevez told me that when his parents got married, his maternal grandmother refused to attend the wedding because Sheen was a Roman Catholic but his wifes mother was a Baptist.
In addition to a spiritual journey, Estevez noted that The Way is not unlike The Wizard of Oz, adding that one of the main characters in the film could be compared to The Tin Man. He said that Sarah (Deborah Kara Unger), a pilgrim that Tom meets on the path who regrets an abortion she had years earlier, could be compared to that character because of what she lost after the awful choice that she made. Through her character, Estevez said, he wanted to give a voice to the unborn.
In many ways, Estevez sees The Way as tonic for the soul. Pessimism and cynicism are the low-hanging fruit." He said, adding that "theyre the easy grab. His film, he noted, encourages people to reach higher on up the tree.
The director hopes that people who are tired of current Hollywood fare embrace his film because its success will be earned through good word of mouth. Estevez said that hes disappointed by a lot of stories that Hollywood releases today and he said that Hollywood is ultimately responsible for the content it puts out. He hopes that people show their discomfort with most current films by embracing The Way.
If you want Hollywood to pay attention, Estevez added, you have to support movies like this and not keep going to the crap.
The Way is in theaters now.
Even the KING , Elvis was not a liberal.
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I doubt he would be the poster child for the right, either.
I want to see this one, but “Courageous” was THE ONE for the year, you should have seen it.
It is the Hollywood Liberals that gave us Obama.
No more evident than today, when Obama is clogging up our traffic for the umpteenth time, second time this month, out here to grab MORE Hollywood money from the only group that unabashedly and stupidly still believes in him enough to toss money his way.
Hollywood had some balance for a time, up until the 1950s. Studio heads tended to identify with one party or another (Jack Warner and Warner Bros. was Democrat, Louis B. Mayer and MGM Republican). Mayer died in the ‘50s and with the so-called “McCarthy Era”, the left became more and more entrenched and reactionary and practiced the methods they falsely accused McCarthy and other Conservatives of, that being blacklisting or just simply not employing Conservatives (only some established stars could get away with holding a non-leftist herd mentality, but often they’d have to claim that they were “social libs”).
I’d call the anti-Conservative standard operating procedure not a conspiracy but a consensus in Hollywood. Who knows how many talented, lesser-known individuals have been discriminated against in the entertainment industry if they are exposed not be a member of the leftist hive. Same goes for the education industry, too.
He's not so full of himself, like other actors, that he's beyond taking small parts in movies not seen like the big blockbusters.
His portrayal of Greg Stinson in “The Dead Zone” (with Christopher “I need more cowbell” Walken) was excellent.
Indeed.
Gard Oldham, Gary Sinese, Bruce Willis, Jeanine Turner, Denzel Washington, Dennis Miller, and a few others are also fine actors, as well as being conservative. I try to patronize their movies and Programs as much as I can. I love Dennis Miller’s radio program, and Gary Sinese is phenomenal! So it is still possible to enjoy movies without being subjected to liberal propaganda, or supporting it with our money.
I read that Jack Warner was a Republican.
Jack Warner may have claimed to be a Republican, but he and Warner Bros. were “the” Democrat studio. They pimped for FDR and even after JW’s supposed support for Nixon in ‘60, went right to pimping for JFK. You can call yourself any political affiliation you wish, but when you pimp for one party and one agenda, that’s what you are.
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