Darren Aronofksy’s Noah could be banned across large swaths of the Middle East and parts of north Africa for contravening Islamic rules on the depiction of prophets,according to the Hollywood Reporter.
The fantasy epic, which stars Russell Crowe as the biblical patriarch, has already been refused a licence by censors in Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates. Egypt could well follow suit, with Jordan and Kuwait also expected to outlaw the film on religious grounds.
“Al-Azhar renews its rejection to [sic] the screening of any production that characterises Allah’s prophets and messengers and the companions of the Prophet [Muhammad],” said one of Egypt’s leading Sunni Muslim institutes in a statement. “Therefore, al-Azhar announces the prohibition of the upcoming film about Allah’s messenger Noah – peace be upon him.” The institute, which is influential but does not have the final say on censorship, added that the movie “contradicts the stature of prophets and messengers … and antagonises the faithful”.
Noah is currently due to open in Egypt on 26 March, two days ahead of its US debut. The film has already caused controversy amid reports that US fundamentalist Christian groups were dismayed at Aronofksy’s decision to produce a loose adaptation of the Bible story rather than a literal retelling. Studio Paramount, which is desperate to court religious filmgoers, last week issued a statement making clear that the movie is not intended as a direct translation.
Aronofsky famously gave up final cut on Noah in return for a $160m budget. But he nevertheless appears to have convinced executives to show his version of the film in cinemas, rather than the reported half a dozen alternative cuts put together by the studio in an attempt to keep churchgoers happy.
“The controversy is all about the unknown and about the fear of people trying to exploit a Bible story,” Aronofsky told Variety this week. “It will all disappear as soon as people start seeing the film.”
The director of Black Swan and The Wrestler hinted he was likely to return to smaller, more intimate movies after the travails he has faced bringing Noah to cinemas.
“I love big movies and small movies and television,” said the film-maker. “I love storytelling, but I’m not going to make another [nine-figure-budget film] tomorrow. I need a break.”