How Hollywood Reinvented C.
S. Lewis in the Film "Shadowlands"
John
G. West
January 1, 1996
The following article is the revised version of an essay that originally
appeared in The Lewis Legacy.
It is understandable why the film "Shadowlands" (now available on videotape) won rave
reviews from almost everybody. The acting is splendid, the script is literate,
and the production design is first-rate. All things considered, the film is a
wonderful piece of cinema and well worth seeing. For those of us who never had
the rare privilege of meeting C. S. Lewis in person, "Shadowlands"
brings Lewis and his world to life in a new way.
Nevertheless, despite its beauty and its pathos, "Shadowlands" is not without major failings in the
realm of accuracy. Unfortunately, many people seem to take at face value the
film's opening claim that "this is a true story." The reviewer for Christianity
Today, for instance, wrote that although "the filmmakers have taken
some liberties with facts...and simplified some of Lewis's complex musings...
the film is generally true to Lewis's life."
As a matter of fact, it isn't. The names of the principal
characters are the same, but much of the plot has been contrived to fit the
point of view of scriptwriter William Nicholson.
I'm not complaining about the numerous small
inaccuracies. I expected those. After all, it doesn't really matter that Joy
had two sons instead of one (though it might matter if you were the son who was
left out). Nor does it really matter that the marriage between Joy and Jack
went on a lot longer than the film indicates (more than three years in
reality). Such errors are minor and certainly fall within the domain of
legitimate dramatic license.
What is more difficult to accept are the two huge errors
on which the whole plot seems to hinge.
The first of these errors is the depiction of Lewis's
life before he met Joy. The film portrays Lewis as leading a cloistered
existence in which he avoided women, children, and--above all--commitments to
any relationship or situation that offered him the potential for risk or pain.
This depiction of Lewis is a convenient way to set up him up for the film's
subsequent love story. But the portrayal invents a C. S. Lewis who never
existed.
Contrary to the storyline of the film, Lewis had lived a
life that was anything but cloistered or free from pain or commitment. During
World War I, the supposedly cloistered Lewis served in the trenches in
The second huge error of the film is its suggestion that
Lewis's faith in God was undermined by Joy's death. While the film shows
grief-torn Lewis saying (quite tentatively) to his stepson that he still
believes in heaven, there is little indication in the film that Lewis still
believes in a loving God. Indeed, in an outburst before his friends, Lewis is
shown railing at the brutality of a God who acts as cosmic vivisectionist.
Although this scene is invented (Lewis's grief was intensely private), the
speech against God that William Nicholson puts in Lewis's mouth is actually
inspired from a passage in Lewis's A Grief Observed. The problem is that
Nicholson is slipshod in the thoughts he chooses to lift from Lewis: He
appropriates Lewis's struggles from A Grief Observed but doesn't bother
to give any sense of the reaffirmation of faith found in the rest of that
book--or in the many other letters, interviews, and articles by Lewis during
the rest of his life. It seems that Mr. Nicholson wasn't interested in
portraying an orthodox Christian who experienced intense grief and yet
maintained both his faith and his intellect.
Here is where the pernicious aspect of Shadowlands becomes evident. Lewis's writings--including
his intimate confessions in A Grief Observed--were largely efforts to
vindicate God's often unfathomable ways to man. Lewis sought to remove the obstacles
that separate us from a living relationship with the One who truly loves us.
"Shadowlands" does precisely the opposite
by setting up Lewis's faith as a straw man and then proceeding to knock it
down.
The film repeatedly shows Lewis delivering a simplistic
speech about how God uses painful experiences to make us listen to Him. The
facile confidence with which Lewis delivers the speech is gradually contrasted
with personal hell he goes through during Joy's sickness and eventual death. By
the end of the film, Lewis has presumably recognized that his simplistic
theological dogmas won't wash. He doesn't find God in suffering; he finds a
silent void. Thus is the most cogent defender of Christian orthodoxy of the
twentieth century transformed into a modern champion of anguished doubt.
I tend to think that most people who view "Shadowlands" will overlook the underlying contempt the
film displays for Lewis's faith because Lewis is portrayed so sympathetically.
And make no mistake: Despite the biographical inaccuracies mentioned above,
Lewis is portrayed sympathetically. This film is not anti-Lewis. But perhaps
that is because the villain in this story is not Lewis, but God.
The great irony of "Shadowlands"
is that it even as it draws people closer to Lewis, it may drive them further
away from the One in whom Lewis found the meaning of life. What a tragedy it
would be if those who see the film come away thinking that Lewis's earlier
faith was somehow refuted by reality. Mind you, I am not claiming that this will
be the result of "Shadowlands." One can
only speculate about the effect of the film on individual viewers, and this
sort of speculation is rather dubious anyway. I can only suggest that given the
film's script that some viewers may conclude that Lewis's defense
of Christianity could not stand the scrutiny of real life.
There is another possibility, of course: The film may
inspire those who see it to read Lewis's writings for themselves
and discover the reality of the faith to which he pointed. I hope that this
second possibility will turn out to be the reality.
John G. West Jr. is a Senior
Fellow of the Discovery Institute where he directs the Religion, Liberty &
Civic Life program.
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