Religulous: Worth a Look This Sunday

I don’t really like to use the term “important” when describing a movie. Sure a movie can be important to the industry. Groundbreaking effects like the original Star Wars or groundbreaking narratives like Pulp Fiction certainly qualify. This may be as close as you can come to an “important” movie in terms of our modern culture.

Bill Maher’s Religulous does have a message. It’s a message many people don’t want to hear. Some people won’t listen to and a message that too many people will probably work hard to get you to ignore.

Maher is a definitely a love him or hate him television personality with the popular late night political talk show Real Time on HBO. Despite his biting commentary on Real Time, in Religulous, Maher pretty much let’s his interview subjects tell their side and show themselves and their beliefs for what they are.

If you didn’t know, it’s a documentary about religion in society and putting religious beliefs out on the table and examining them at face value. More importantly, it’s about breaking the mysterious taboo that religion has in society that it’s not appropriate to discuss rationally. We can disagree on just about everything else and still be civil, but as soon as you examine or question someone’s faith you’re suddenly crossing the line.

Maher is blunt with his interview subjects, but fair and challenging. Make no mistake though, Religulous is also devastatingly funny, cleverly edited and well constructed. Maher, for being so blunt and opinionated on his show, is surprisingly skillful with putting his interview subjects in comfortable positions. In one segment, he interviews the head of a religious organization with the goal to “rehabilitate” homosexuals and bring them to Jesus. For the record, the interview subject was a “former” homesexual himself. By the middle of the interview, the subject is getting quite irate and ready to kick the film crew out, but Maher, while still offering challenges manages to turn it completely around without backing down from his positions. By the end of the interview they are laughing, comfortable and joking. More than just one interview goes this direction. Some of his subjects even welcome Maher’s questioning about their specific beliefs.

One of the most interesting interviews is in front of the Vatican with a senior priest who is surprisingly blunt and dismissive about virtually every Catholic dogma and admitting how ridiculous it is to believe in some of the biblical mainstays literally. Another interview with a United States congressman will make you sit in disbelief and embarrassment.

The tone of the film gets darker in the last third or so when it turns away from Christianity and towards Jewish and Islamic issues. He treads lightly with the Islamic subjects and it gets somewhat uncomfortable, and quite frankly, a little scary. Eventually, the conclusion of the film is about the dangers of religion and in particular the how the religious differences between Jews, Christians and Muslims are the root of a serious problem.

Some people are going to dismiss this film because of their dislike of Bill Maher. Others will dismiss it simply because of the religious content and the “audacity” of examining religious beliefs at face value, but that’s exactly what the film is meant to do. If faith isn’t strong enough to stand up to scrutiny, is it worth having?

With no hesitation, I recommend Religulous as a film that you should make a point to see. Granted, it’s not for everyone. Unfortunately, the people that aren’t going to give this film a look are probably the people that need to see it the most.

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2 Responses to “Religulous: Worth a Look This Sunday”

  1. admin Says:

    Thanks for the write up, Scuzz. While not having a religious belief I was skeptical this might be too one sided to be really enjoyable but it sounds like it’s definitely worth seeing now.

  2. ScuzzBuster Says:

    It’s like walking on egg shells. Hardcore religious believers perceive any questioning of their faith as an attack. Mahar’s toughest questions in the movie to believers are pretty much “Why do you believe?” He never tells someone they shouldn’t. Reading national reviews after I saw the film you can see the divide in the critics as well. A couple of critics called it sure to “offend.” Another reviewer makes the important point that they failed to see how simply restating someone’s beliefs back to them and asking them how they came to have those beliefs can be seen as an attack. One of the harshest questions Mahar asks someone in the film (and I personally don’t view it as harsh) is when the comment is made to him by a subject that “having faith is a good thing.” Mahar’s response is “So why is believing something without evidence a good thing?” Regardless of your beliefs, this is a good general question to ask yourself about everything in your life, not just religion.

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