On May 21, 2026, Lionsgate officially marked the end of filming on Mel Gibson’s The Resurrection of Christ, the long-awaited follow-up to the 2004 blockbuster The Passion of the Christ. However, fans looking at the first-look images were shocked to see a completely different face under the crown of thorns. Instead of firing him over a dramatic behind-the-scenes feud, a closer look at the production reveals exactly why Mel Gibson fired the original Jesus from his sequel and chose a fresh face to lead the biblical epic.
The Age Deficit and the Timeline Trap
The decision to replace original star Jim Caviezel boils down to basic biological math and a strict narrative timeline. Unlike the 22 years that have passed in the real world since the original film, the plot of the new sequel takes place just three days after Christ’s crucifixion on Good Friday. Jim Caviezel is currently 57 years old. To make him look like a 33-year-old Jesus immediately following the events of the first movie, the studio would have had to rely on incredibly expensive and extensive digital de-aging technology. Rather than dealing with a CGI-heavy facelift, Gibson opted for a clean break, casting Finnish actor Jaakko Ohtonen to take over the iconic role.
Caviezel wasn’t the only one left behind. The role of Mary Magdalene was also recast, with Cuban actress Mariela Garriga taking over the part originally played by Monica Bellucci.

Recasting Was Practical, But It Breaks the Magic
Mel Gibson made the right technical call, even if it feels incredibly harsh to the fans who loved the original film. Digital de-aging in Hollywood is a massive gamble. Half the time, actors end up looking like weird, uncanny-valley video game characters, just look at Robert De Niro in The Irishman. For a movie that relies entirely on deep emotional and spiritual weight, having a distracting, computer-generated face on Jesus would have completely ruined the experience.
However, I can’t help but feel that a piece of the movie’s soul is missing without Caviezel. His intense, haunting performance is what made the 2004 film an absolute phenomenon that brought in $610 million. Replacing him with an unknown Finnish actor feels less like a smooth continuation and more like a total reboot. Gibson is taking a massive risk here; he’s betting that his directing style and the script are the real stars of the show, rather than the actor who originally brought his vision to life.
An “Acid Trip” Into the Afterlife
Gibson has made it clear that this two-part sequel is going to be wildly different from the ultra-grounded, gritty realism of the first film. Gibson has described the script as an absolute “acid trip,” explaining that to tell the story of the three days between the Crucifixion and the Resurrection, the movie has to visit supernatural realms. The narrative won’t just stay in Jerusalem; it will actively explore the fall of the angels, the depths of Hell, and the realm of Sheol.
Lionsgate is treating this as a massive cinematic event. Part One is scheduled to hit theaters on Ascension Day, May 6, 2027, while Part Two will land a year later on May 25, 2028.
A Bold New Vision
Mel Gibson has spent over twenty years treating this project as a personal creative mission, and he clearly wasn’t going to let sentimentality stand in the way of his vision. By passing the torch from Jim Caviezel to Jaakko Ohtonen, Gibson avoided a visual effects nightmare, even if it meant leaving the original “Jesus” behind. Whether modern audiences will connect with a brand-new cast in these surreal, supernatural settings remains to be seen, but one thing is certain: Gibson is pulling out all the stops for his ultimate masterpiece.




