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That’s Ridiculous

by Richard Clark

6 September 2008 88 views 3 CommentsPrint this post Print this post

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Jeffrey Overstreet with sad news about Bill Maher’s upcoming Religulous.

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3 Comments »

  • Denny said:

    Could you relink? The link above does not work.

  • Richard Clark (author) said:

    Thanks for the heads up. Fixed.

  • The Dane said:

    Gratuitously long quote from James Berardinelli, who just saw the film at Toronto Film Festival:

    After seeing The Hurt Locker, I changed gears and sat down to watch the Bill Maher/Larry David collaboration, Religulous. The success of the film may be based on expectations. If you are a deeply religious person, this is guaranteed to offend. If you’re neither especially religious or irreligious, you’ll probably get a few good laughs. However, if you’re a member of the choir to which Maher is preaching, you may find this to be an especially shallow and uninteresting motion picture. It doesn’t do anything provocative. It’s a 90-minute, comically-tinged rant against religion that offers selectively edited interviews with ringers. Maher’s thesis is that religion is irrational and dangerous, and that’s not exactly groundbreaking material. I happen to agree with a lot of what he says, but I was not at all impressed by the way he goes about saying it. Those who are offended by this film have a right to feel that way - the movie cheats and, by cheating, trivializes the very message it attempts to promote.

    Religulous combines short monologues by Maher with interviews to illustrate nearly every conceivable negative associated with religion and to highlight the inconsistencies that believers ignore (or which do not appear as inconsistencies to them). There are no meaningful dialogues on potentially thought-provoking topics such as faith, the separation of Church and State in the United States, and how religions view one another. More than 50% of the movie ridicules Christianity, leaving scant time for Judaism and Islam. Relatively minor sects/cults like Mormonism and Scientology are addressed while major religions like Hinduism and Buddhism are completely ignored.

    In picking his interview subjects, Maher has largely elected to go with fringe figures rather than those who might engage him in a thoughtful and spirited debate. His talk with the Christian head of the Human Genome Project is brief and unenlightening. Mark Pryor, a Democrat Senator from Arkansas, might rank as the dumbest member of the U.S. government based on his interview. The fact is, however, that Maher follows in the footsteps of Michael Moore and Ben Stein by editing interviews in ways that serve his thesis. Many viewers of Religulous will be aware that what they’re viewing has been sanitized and scrubbed to Maher’s specifications.

    While the film is an utter failure as a documentary (it’s more of a visual op-ed piece), it has moments of genuinely funny comedy. There are times when the inserted movie and video clips are inspired choices and some of Maher’s tongue-in-cheek sarcasm is effective. On the whole, however, the occasional chuckles provoked by the movie don’t make up for its sloppy, less-than-rigorous examination of an issue that deserves something more exhaustive. If the subject of religion is as important to Maher as he claims during his end comments, then he should have followed those words with actions and made a movie that’s more than a sum of inauthentic interviews, ranting attacks, and obvious observations. The choir may hum along with Maher but the rest of those watching this movie will be singing the blues.

    The Danes last blog post..20080911

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