![]() | Religion News Report Archived News items about religious cults, sects, and alternative religions About RNR Latest News News Database RNR FAQ |
Man's film a veiled look at Scientology
A 20-year former Scientologist who now calls it a cult has created a work of fiction that closely resembles the Clearwater group.
St. Petersburg Times, Aug. 2, 2001http://www.sptimes.com/ [Story no longer online? Read this]
It's a movie about cults based on fictional characters, says the director. But it's hard to miss the inspiration behind The Profit.
The main character is a science-fiction writer who founds a religion. Get it? The leader starts the Church of Scientific Spiritualism. His name: L. Conrad Powers. The full-length feature film was written and directed by Peter Alexander, a 20-year Scientologist who broke from the church in 1997 and now calls it an elaborate fraud. It was funded in part by Bob Minton, the Church of Scientology's most vocal critic. And in three weeks, it will be shown to the public for the first time at an independent theater in none other than Clearwater, the mecca for Scientologists who come there from around the world for church counseling. Filmed in eight weeks last summer amid the backdrop of Fort De Soto Park and the bustle of Ybor City, the production was the target of constant harassment from Scientologists, Alexander said. At one point, he said, members of the Foundation for Religious Tolerance of Florida handed out fliers denouncing the film's backers at the film site and followed crew members home to press them for information about the content of the film. Mary DeMoss of Clearwater, a Scientologist and founder of the Foundation for Religious Tolerance of Florida, calls the movie a "hate propaganda film." She denies anyone from her organization followed anyone home and says the fliers were intended to "let the people know who was behind this." And that, she said, is the church's nemesis, the Lisa McPherson Trust. McPherson was a 36-year-old Scientologist who died in 1995 after 17 days in the care of Scientology staffers in Clearwater. The cast of the $2-million film is made up mostly of New York stage actors, Alexander said. But it also includes cameos by many of Scientology's staunchest critics, including Minton, trust president Stacy Brooks, church critic Jesse Prince and lawyer Ken Dandar, who represents the trust in a lawsuit against the church. Alexander said he was introduced to the church in the late 1970s by his future wife. Over the years, he estimates he donated $1-million to the church. Alexander became vice president at Universal Studios, where he was executive producer for its tourist attractions. Ten years ago, he started the Totally Fun Co., which specializes in creating theme park attractions, including most of the big attractions at Universal Studios in Orlando. His schism with the church developed not long after he and his wife split up in 1997. Alexander said he became convinced that Scientology was a cult after he did some research on the Internet. For a while, he took up with the Lisa McPherson Trust but has since dropped out. Alexander said he began to read about various cults and some of the common threads that run through them. And then he decided to write a movie about it. Alexander says the film is based on a fictional character he created, but has "many parallels to reality." (...) Ben Shaw, a spokesman for Scientology, said he agrees with Alexander that the movie is fiction and has nothing to do with Scientology. (...) St. Petersburg Times movie critic Steve Persall, who viewed the movie in an invitation-only pre-screening in June, offered this assessment: "The movie looks like any other exploitation flick: cheap production values, stilted drama, gratuitous nudity ... and episodes that pop up and disappear without much detail except what's supposed to shove the audience into a desired reaction -- in this case, outrage. It's hard to take seriously, in part because the story seems so far-fetched." (...) So far, major film distributors have not beckoned. The Clearwater Cinema Cafe, a two-screen theater on the northeast corner of U.S. 19 and Sunset Point Road, is the only Tampa Bay area theater so far to commit to showing the film. Theater owner Larry Greenbaum said he expected some heat when he decided to run the movie. [...more...] [Need the full story? Read this]
Commentary:
Ms. DeMoss' comments demonstrate the hypocrisy common to Scientologists. The Church of Scientology is a commercial enterprise that masquerades as a religion, and that increasingly acts like a hate group.
Religion News Blog
Religion News Blog (RNB) carries the latest news about cults, religious sects, world religions, televangelists, and related issues. |
Apologetics Index (apologeticsindex.org, countercult.com, cultfaq.org) provides 40,870+
pages of research resources on religious cults, sects, new religious movements, alternative religions, apologetics-, anticult-, and countercult organizations, doctrines, religious practices and world views. These resources reflect a variety of theological and/or sociological perspectives.
The site provides information that helps equip Christians to logically present and defend the Christian faith, and that aids non-Christians in their comparison of various religious claims. Issues addressed range from spiritual and cultic abuse to contemporary theological and/or sociological concerns. Apologetics Index also includes ex-cult support resources - including a directory of cult experts (CultExperts.org), up-to-date religion and cult news (Religon News Blog: ReligionNewsBlog.com), articles on Christian life and ministry, and a variety of other features. |
|
Look, "feel" and original content are © Copyright 1996-2006, Apologetics Index Pages on this site may not be copied or framed. |