
Filming has begun on Mel Gibsonâs long-awaited sequel to âThe Passion of the Christ,â titled âThe Resurrection of the Christ,â with Finnish actor Jaakko Ohtonen taking over the role of Jesus from Jim Caviezel.
According to Variety, production started last week at Romeâs CinecittĂ Studios, where Gibson also shot the 2004 original, which grossed $610 million worldwide and became one of the highest-earning independent films in history.
The new project, produced by Gibson and Bruce Davey under their Icon Productions banner with Lionsgate as studio partner, will be released in two parts in 2027.

Cuban actress Mariela Garriga (âMission: Impossible â Dead Reckoningâ) will portray Mary Magdalene, replacing Monica Bellucci. Kasia Smutniak (âDominaâ) will play Mary, previously portrayed by Maia Morgenstern. Peter will be portrayed by Italian actor Pier Luigi Pasino (âThe Law According to Lidia PoĂ«tâ), and Riccardo Scamarcio (âModĂŹâ) will take on the role of Pontius Pilate. Rupert Everett will appear in a âsmall but important role,â according to producers.
âIt made sense to recast the whole film,â a source close to the production told Variety. âThey would have had to do all this CGI stuff â de-aging and all that â that would have been very costly.â
Ohtonen, 36, is best known for his portrayal of the warrior Wolland in season five of Netflixâs historical drama âThe Last Kingdom.â
Gibson co-wrote the new film with âBraveheartâ screenwriter Randall Wallace and described the sequels as âan acid trip,â adding that he had ânever read anything likeâ the scripts. While plot details remain under wraps, the story will focus on the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
âThe Resurrection of the Christ: Part Oneâ is slated to open on Good Friday, March 26, 2027, followed by âPart Twoâ on Ascension Day, May 6, 2027. In addition to CinecittĂ âs new Studio 22, filming will take place in the ancient southern Italian city of Matera and other nearby locations, including Ginosa, Gravina, Laterza and Altamura.
The original âPassion of the Christ,â filmed in Aramaic, Hebrew and Latin, depicted the final 12 hours of Jesusâ life and became a landmark in faith-based cinema. The sequel aims to pick up where that story left off at the dawn of the resurrection.
In a 2022 interview with CP, Gibson revealed heâs drawn to stories that highlight redemption and the need for a Savior.
âIâve been taught from a young age that weâre flawed, and youâre going to make mistakes,â he reflected. âWeâre broken, and we need help. Usually, the best way to get help is to ask for it. And well, who do we ask? Weâre asking something better than us. And the minute you acknowledge that there is something better than you, you might get something that resembles humility, which is really the key to the whole thing.â
He encouraged the next generation to âstickâ to their âconvictionsâ even though itâs âhardâ in an increasingly polarized society.
âSometimes youâre presented with choices or put in places that are very difficult, and some of those choices are hard,â he said. âYou just have to examine your own conscience and take the right road, I think. ⊠Thereâs no right way; there are a million wrong ways, and you just have to eliminate those or just use your best discernment to get through it.â
âBut itâs hard, man,â he added. âLifeâs hard. But weâre all going. Weâve all got a boulder weâre dragging.â


