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HOLIDAYS & EVENTS



Religulous
Review by Brett McCracken | posted 10/03/2008




Religulous

Our rating:

Your rating:  

MPAA rating: R
(for some language and sexual material)

Genre: Comedy, Documentary

Theater release:
October 03, 2008
by Lionsgate

Directed by: Larry Charles

Runtime: 1 hour 41 minutes

Cast: Bill Maher

Related
Talk About It/Family Corner


Let's face it: most documentaries these days don't bother to document anything in an objective, journalistic sense. We can thank Michael Moore for re-conceiving the documentary film as something akin to a sensationalistic, cinematic op-ed piece. If you have something you hate, or something you want to humiliate in as public a way as possible, make a documentary! And this is precisely what Bill Maher does in his new anti-religion film, Religulous.

Maher, who grew up Catholic (with a Jewish mother), loathes religion. This film doesn't make it clear why he hates it so, aside from some comments about how Catholicism "wasn't relevant" to his life as a child. But hate it he does. Religulous is Maher's attempt to sell the idea that religions are the most dangerous threat facing mankind, that "religion must die for mankind to live."

Bill Maher outside the Vatican City
Bill Maher outside the Vatican City

Maher spends the film traveling all over the world, along with Borat director Larry Charles and a small camera crew proficient in the art of "sabotage interview." The first half of the film is mostly focused on evangelical Christians, how they believe in things like a 5,000-year-old earth, etc. Maher takes a trip to the Creation Museum in Hebron, Kentucky, where he interviews creationism guru Ken Ham against the backdrop of animatronic dinosaurs with saddles (for humans to ride on). And he also interviews young-earth evangelical Mark Pryor, a democratic senator from Arkansas who creates some of the funniest moments of the film. To be fair, Maher also interviews Christian evolutionist Francis Collins, but he too comes out looking a bit buffoonish.

Ever the equal-opportunity atheist, Maher spends the second half of the film undermining religions and cults of every shape and size. He goes to Utah and skewers Mormonism, interviews Puerto Rican cult leader Jose Luis De Jesus Miranda (who claims to be the Antichrist), and even gets high with a leader of a religion based around marijuana. He goes to the Vatican and interviews some crazy Catholic priest, and Jerusalem to deconstruct Judaism and Islam. Maher is particularly hard on Islam, offering somewhat surprising pronouncements about the inherent violence and barbarism of that most touchy of all world religions. At moments like these, Maher might actually find allies in conservative Christian circles.

Maher at the Truckers Chapel in Raleigh, NC
Maher at the Truckers Chapel in Raleigh, NC

All along the journey, Maher and Charles jazz up the images with achingly sardonic voiceovers and music, and some very clever quick-cut editing (inserting 2 seconds of Charlton Heston-as-Moses at opportune moments, for example). It's stylishly presented, to be sure, but for all its panache, Religulous is ultimately a very predictable movie. It borrows from the usual suspects (Michael Moore, Morgan Spurlock) in formatting the agitprop docu-comedy template for this particular crusade, and we can almost see the punchlines coming as a result.

What do you expect to happen when Maher stops at a truck-stop chapel in North Carolina to quiz long-haul truckers about biblical inconsistencies? What else but exploitative ridiculousness can result when Bill "religion is too easy" Maher spends a day in Florida's Holy Land Experience—where the Passion of the Christ is reenacted with cheap props while a Sandi Patty wannabe sings "Via Dolorosa"?




Reader Reviews
Your Rating:  

Displaying 1 - 3 of 102 comments.See all comments
Colin   Posted: July 09, 2009 8:05 PM
This film is not sensationalistic at all, and the only people that botch the interviews are the interviewees. Maher isn't an atheist, he is an agnostic; obviously this guy doesn't understand the difference. Maher repeatedly shows understanding for those who don't interpret their religions literally. The entire point of the movie is not to sabotage religion, but to show that people are tossing intelligence and common sense aside for blind faith. What kind of christian judges somebody based on their occupation "What do you expect to happen when Maher stops at a truck-stop chapel in North Carolina to quiz long-haul truckers about biblical inconsistencies?" not jesus....asshole.

Rolf   Posted: June 28, 2009 2:25 PM
Great to see 2 things here: good comments and a review of this particular movie on a christian site. I really liked the movie and i think he raised a lot of questions. (of course not new, but important questions) To everybody: go watch the movie and think about it

Casey   Posted: June 26, 2009 3:24 AM
We are a nation that is unenlightened because of religion. Bill Maher has brought atheism and agnostic ideas into play in modern America. It's sad that we can't elect leaders based off their political ideals with out bringing in the question of "God." The day that Americans elect a non-christian president is the day that enlightenment returns to this once great nation. If you are able to tolerate the concept of "what if," I urge you to watch this film.


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