Mel Gibson BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Mel Gibson has returned to major international headlines this week with the official announcement that his long-delayed sequel The Resurrection of the Christ will not only go forward with studio backing from Lionsgate but will actually arrive in two parts. The first is set for March 26, 2027, Good Friday, and the second will follow on Ascension Day, May 6, 2027. The sequels, starring Jim Caviezel as Jesus, will reportedly take a bold narrative leap, with Gibson describing the scripts as nothing short of an acid trip through salvation history, and production is set to begin in Italy this month—one of the most anticipated developments since The Passion of the Christ upended box office expectations twenty years ago. Variety reports that Lionsgate has locked in distribution, meaning this once-stalled project, endlessly rumored and speculated over in Hollywood, is finally real and, for the many faithful tracking its every update, potentially a biographical turning point in cementing Gibson’s legacy.
On the festival circuit and in the streaming world, Gibson has another new release: Monster Summer, his 2024 horror adventure with Mason Thames, is debuting on Paramount Plus with Showtime, extending his late-career run as a dependable genre star. Meanwhile, Gibson remains a discussion point in pop culture, as social media buzzes about his recent public appearance at an Armenian church service in Rome, with fan-shot photos circulating widely. Separately, a video interview posted by TMZ spurred online debate, as Gibson repeated his support for Donald Trump over Kamala Harris, disparaging her with a dismissive remark that echoed talking points from the Republican campaign. This appearance, and Trump’s continued invocation of Gibson’s persona on social media, confirm that the actor-director is as politically polarizing as ever, with his every utterance pored over by both supporters and detractors.
Recent Hollywood chatter has also included Andrew Garfield—Oscar-nominated for working with Gibson on Hacksaw Ridge—telling People magazine that Gibson deserves to keep making movies, emphasizing the personal healing Gibson claims to have done since his 2006 scandal. That period and Gibson’s struggle with being ostracized were further highlighted in a candid new interview where he credited Robert Downey Jr. for standing by him during the fallout. Meanwhile, Jason Isaacs, Gibson’s former co-star in The Patriot, reignited difficult conversations around Gibson’s past antisemitic remarks, calling them unconscionable and unforgivable during a recent press interview, a reminder that for every new project, old controversies are still part of the narrative.
Headlines this week confirm that Mel Gibson remains impossible to ignore. With a high-profile film comeback officially greenlit, a steady presence on streaming platforms, personal and political statements stirring the cultural pot, and his decades-old scandals still fueling debate, Gibson is poised—for better or worse—to once again shape the cinema and celebrity conversation in a way few others can.
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