April 1, 1995 Furor Over Priest By BRUCE KIRKLAND Toronto Sun HOLLYWOOD - Sex or religion? Bare bums or bared souls? British filmmaker Antonia Bird figured her controversial film Priest would generate a religious storm, not a sexual one, when it hit America. She was wrong, although there is a teapot tempest over the release date - in the U.S. but not Canada - because it originally landed on Good Friday in some cities. It's pegged for April 7 in Toronto, steering clear of the danger zone. There are also signs some Roman Catholic groups in North America are generating opposition to the film because of its subject matter. But Bird says the real fuss has been over cuts and changes to the scenes of sexual trysts between the priest and his male lover. Priest is the story of a sexually repressed and morally tortured young priest who lives a secret life trolling through gay bars in Liverpool. When he actually finds a lover who wants a real relationship, not just sex, and when his activities are made public, the priest's world implodes with a fury. "To be honest," Bird says, "I had no idea how sensitive the subject of sex is here." She is referring to the U.S. When Priest made its North American debut last September at the Toronto filmfest, audiences embraced it without reservation and voted it as the people's choice for most popular film. Nevertheless, Bird has been forced, since Toronto, to cut 10 minutes out and use more tame shots of priest star Linus Roache in his bedroom scenes. "I'm completely and utterly amazed that in this modern, forward-thinking society," Bird says, "you're allowing people's heads to be blown off (in films), with the most awful violence depicted, and you can't have two people in the privacy of their own home make love. Please! How insane is that? "So I didn't expect it. It never occurred to me that there was anything remotely offensive or anything that would be sensitive in this film. So, when that (sex) came up for discussion in the States, I was, to use a Liverpudlian phrase, gobsmacked!" Bird did not eliminate the "naughty bits" but re-worked them to avoid the American NC-17 rating. She is actually amused over the bare-bottom shots. "I think it's incredibly funny that you can't show a bare male bottom (if the men are engaged in a sex act together) on the screen. And they were beautiful male bottoms. It wasn't disgusting!" The religious protest, however, has not reached the fire-and-brimstone level Bird expected. "I was really ready for that, muscles clenched and ready for the fight. And then it's the sex that's the problem. Incredible! Very interesting!" But Priest has a life. Bird is basking in the glow and giving credit to the Toronto festival for launching the film internationally. The first Toronto sceening, she says, "was honestly - and this is not an exaggeration - the most extraordinarily wonderful night of my life! I mean, I could have died happy that night. "And Toronto completely started the process of the film being sold around the world. Suddenly, we had a major movie on our hands, which is just extraordinary to me. I'm still kind of reeling from the shock."