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Monday, May 27, 2019

“The Mission” Film Analysis

?The nature of greed is that it compels us to do dangerous things. It disregards the feelings and positions of others and instead replaces them with what we want out of the situation. Latin America, a beautiful part of the world rich with history and culture, knows exactly what greed can do, especially to hungry imperialists seeking to plunder the resources and vitality in spite of appearance its borders. An aggressive desire for wealth, riches, spices, and other material things have made Latin America an arena for violence against native Latin Americans.In the film The Mission, director Roland Joffe shows us the power of faith in religion and God as well as the dangerous result of passion and greed coming together as one. ?In this film, a Jesuit priest named puzzle Gabriel goes into the deepest parts of the Latin American jungle and seeks to evangelize the local tribe living there. Although they are ab initio wary of him, the natives eventually begin to trust him and allow him to convert them.Mendoza, counted by Robert De Niro, is a former slave trader who later on killing his chum salmon in a fit of rage, decides to join Father Gabriel in his missionary work and spreads the values of the mission and religion. Their hard work and unity as a mission is threatened when the Portuguese attack and attempt to control the land and people the mission is founded on. Father Gabriel, a man full of faith in God and religion, seeks nonviolent means to fight the Portuguese. Mendoza, however, after vowing to also act nonviolently, breaks his promise and teaches the natives how to fight against the Portuguese.The film, unlike most other films, does not have a happy ending. Eventually, almost everyone perishes and only a few are left to spread the values of hunch, faith, religion, and to rebuild the community that they grew to respect and cherish. ?Religion and the church play a huge role in the film. Despite the obvious fact that the premise of the film is about a prie st evangelizing native Latin Americans, the unearthly aspect of the film emits a sense of love, benevolence, and goodwill. The film maker suggests that unlike many other invaders of Latin America, the Christian missionaries wanted to entirely devote themselves to the natives.They devoted themselves reliably and were willing to preserve the natives pure way of life, unlike many invaders who came into Latin America and attempted to halt all that was common and introduced new ways of living. The filmmaker tells us that in order to represent the values of Christianity, people must devote themselves fully and be willing to make sacrifices, just like Father Gabriel and Mendoza did for the natives and the mission. ?Another theme in the film is the union of greed and passion. It is no surprise, especially to Latin America, that the desire for worldly things can cause great goal and tragedy.The two main reasons the mission was threatened in the film boils down to imperialism and greed, w hich are essentially interchangeable. To imperialize a country is to be riddled with greed and hunger. Greed, desiring to get more than one needs or even deserves to possess, is conveyed endlessly throughout the film. The Portuguese only wanted to gain the mission and land for profit. Even worse, after they would gain the land they so desperately desired, they would enslave the people and make them operate under Portuguese rules to further their profit and power.In this film, greed and power sabotage morals and the ethics of human kind. The filmmaker showcases the worst traits in man, in which the desire for mere things cause man to slaughter man and disregard the love and respect humans should have for one another. ?The film, although tragic and essentially very morbid, mirrors the historical realities of the time and illustrates Latin Americas struggle to keep itself a stable, prospering region despite the invading forces of greedy, insatiable imperialists.

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