Luther (2003 film)

For other uses, see Luther (disambiguation).
Luther

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Eric Till
Produced by Brigitte Rochow
Christian P. Stehr
Alexander Thies
Written by Camille Thomasson
Bart Gavigan
Starring Joseph Fiennes
Alfred Molina
Jonathan Firth
Claire Cox
Peter Ustinov
Music by Richard Harvey
Cinematography Robert Fraisse
Distributed by R.S.
Release dates
30 October 2003 (2003-10-30)
Running time
124 minutes
Country
Language English
Budget $30 million
Box office $29,413,900

Luther is a 2003 biopic about the life of Martin Luther (14831546) starring Joseph Fiennes. It was an independent film partially funded by Thrivent Financial for Lutherans. The film covers Luther's life from his becoming a monk in 1505 to the Diet of Augsburg in 1530.

Plot

The film begins during a thunderstorm in 1505 as Luther is returning to his home. For fear of losing his life in the storm, Luther commits his life to God and becomes an Augustinian monk.

In the next scene, it is 1507 and Luther is a monk in Erfurt. During his time at the monastery, he is constantly troubled by viewing God as a God of hate and vengeance. Martin is encouraged by Johann von Staupitz, an older monk who is his supervisor and mentor. Staupitz tells Luther to look to Christ instead of himself.

Later Luther delivers a letter for Staupitz to Rome where he becomes troubled by the wicked lifestyles of those in the city. He also views the skull believed to be that of John the Baptist and purchases an indulgence. It is during this time that Luther begins to question the veracity of indulgences.

Returning to Germany, Luther is sent to Wittenberg, where he begins to teach his congregation that God is not a God of hate, but a God of love. Luther begins to emphasize the love of God instead of his judgment.

John Tetzel then comes close to Luther's town where he scares the people into buying indulgences. (The proceeds would be used to build St. Peter's Basilica in Rome and to recover the Hohenzollern bribes to the Holy See, advanced by Fugger, for the investiture of Archbishop Albert of Mainz and Magdeburg). In his church, Luther denounces the indulgences, calling them "just a piece of paper." He then posts his 95 theses on the door of the church, calling for an open debate regarding the indulgences. For this act, Luther is called to Augsburg where he is questioned by church officials.

After his excommunication, Pope Leo X orders Luther to be delivered to Rome, but Prince-elector Frederick the Wise of Saxony protects him by moving him into Wartburg Castle. Frederick and Charles V decide that Luther will be tried at the diet of Worms.

After his trial at Worms, Luther is forced into hiding by Frederick the Wise at the Wartburg, while his former professor, Andreas Karlstadt, encourages the Great Peasants' Revolt against the oppressive nobles. Luther, shocked by the revolts, encourages the princes to put them down. Meanwhile, Luther translates the Bible into German.

After Luther marries Katharina von Bora, Charles V summons the evangelical Princes of the Holy Roman Empire to the Diet of Augsburg, so he can force them to outlaw Protestantism and the German Bible. The nobles refuse and Charles is forced to allow the nobles to read their Augsburg Confession.

The film ends with the following words:

What happened at Augsburg pushed open the door of religious freedom. Martin Luther lived for another 16 years, preaching and teaching the Word. He and Katharina von Bora enjoyed a happy marriage and six children. Luther's influence extended into economics, politics, education and music, and his translation of the Bible became a foundation stone of the German language.

Today over 540 million people worship in churches inspired by his Reformation.

Film inaccuracies

Cast and crew

Actor Role
Joseph Fiennes Martin Luther
Alfred Molina John Tetzel
Jonathan Firth Girolamo Aleander
Claire Cox Katharina von Bora
Sir Peter Ustinov Frederick the Wise
Bruno Ganz Johann von Staupitz
Uwe Ochsenknecht Pope Leo X
Mathieu Carrière Cardinal Cajetan
Benjamin Sadler Spalatin
Jochen Horst Professor Karlstadt
Torben Liebrecht Charles V
Maria Simon Hanna
Lars Rudolph Melanchthon
Marco Hofschneider Ulrich Werner
Christopher Buchholz von der Eck
Timothy Peach Karl von Miltitz
Tom Strauss George of Brandenburg
Gene Reed John of Saxony
Anian Zollner Philip of Hesse
Johannes Lang Albert Archbishop of Mainz
Jeff Boyd Prior
Jeff Caster Matthew
Hussi Kutlucan Blacksmith
Michael Traynor Hans Luther
Joost Siedhoff Old Monk
Anatole Taubman Otto
Lena Krimmel Teresa
Doris Prusova Grete
Jindrich Fajst Thomas
Robert Russell Gravedigger
Felix Klare Student 1
Florian Panzner Student 2
Jens Winter Fugger auditor
Alexander Kendzia Dominican friar 1
Cesare Cremonini Dominican friar 2
Martino d'Amico Dominican friar 3
James Babson Dominican friar 4
Franco Mirabella Vatican monk
Maurizio Luca Hawker
Carlos Valles Elderly monk
Thomas Dehler Tradesman
Jan Nemejovsky Albert's secretary
Jiri Maria Sieber Executioner
Martin Faltyn Carmelite monk
Herb Andress Gunter
Jirina Mencakova Ex-nun
Mathias Engel Common man 1
Ekkehard Schwarz Common man 2
Oliver McGillick Kid
Jaroslav Novotny Kaspar Sturm

References

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