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Religulous

Bubonic

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Didn't find any thread about this movie/documentary, so here it is.
Anyone else looking forward to this, or at least curious?

Here is a trailer;



Here is some CBS interview with clips;



And here is an interview from Larry King Live;


 
I saw it last Wednesday at my local critics' screening. It's a great film! Very funny, intellectually stimulating and actually quite powerful. A LOT of people are going to be pissed though, as Maher essentially pokes hole in the insanity of religious idealogies and is pleading for an abandonment of organized religion in the name of human progress.

I'll do up a full review in the coming days, but my rating would be a 9/10. And I tend to rate on the harder side.
 
I'd love to see it, but it'll have to wait for DVD.
 
Haha I would really like to see this, testing everybody's religious belief.
 
I have a feeling many are going to be put off by the dark turn it takes about halfway through, with an intense, visually arresting final condemnation of irrational religious tunnel-vision. I'm not 100% in agreement with the message, but it's certainly a compelling argument that is worthy of a greater discussion. It's also a call to arms for atheists to unite and make their voices known. They (including myself) are the largest minority in North America, and need to stop letting Judeo-Christian power figures decide the way our countries (I'm Canadian, so this is less the case for us) are being run without our input.
 
I was amused by the trailer, not sure if I'll go see it or not. I wonder how long it'll be in theaters.
 
It is noted as being a limited release, I think it might not be as abrasive as something Dawkins would do since the humour won't be so dry even though some of the arrogance will probably be there.
I still bet most people that "should" watch this will never do such a thing.
Organized religion certainly is what it claims to be at times.
 
It's playing at AFI, which actually allows a church to use its space on Sunday morning.
 
I'm excited for it. Hopefully it will un-do some of the damage caused by that stupid f**king Ben Stein movie.
 
I'm excited for it. Hopefully it will un-do some of the damage caused by that stupid f**king Ben Stein movie.

I doubt anyone who watched and believed in that Expelled movie would want anything to do with this one.

Not sure how it was but I'm thinking it wasn't a movie for fence-sitters, perhaps this one will be.
 
Saw Bill Maher on the Daily Show last night promoting this movie, seemed interesting, but I probably wouldn't get around to watching it.
 
My review:

"Tell me I'm a sinner I've got news for you/I spoke to God this morning and he doesn't like you!"
-Ozzy Osbourne - "I Don't Want To Change the World"

This song lyric ran through my head a couple times during Religulous, the stunning new documentary from Borat director Larry Charles, as I watched the film’s writer/narrator/interviewer Bill Maher, formerly of Politically Incorrect, impishly journey through the inner-most sanctums of organized religion and spirituality. There’s an infectious coiled energy that permeates from the diminutive outlaw comedian’s illusionary facade of laid-back cool, and this devilish fearlessness makes him the ideal master of ceremonies for Religulous, a film that has proven, predictably, to be a firebrand for controversy over the last couple of months.

Opening the film standing on the site of Megiddo, the Christian prophesied site of Armageddon, Maher states his thesis immediately: that religion is detrimental to the progress of humanity. There’s a jolt that comes with hearing a statement such as this spoken aloud as we’ve been socialized in North America to practice a sense of hesitant respectfulness when discussing religion. It’s a private matter, best discussed among family and members of your spiritual community. This, to paraphrase Maher, is poppycock.

Maher, a lapsed Catholic whose beliefs fall on the agnostic side of the spectrum, isn’t comfortable with current political structure of his country, much less the world, where the fate of the globe rests in the hands of individuals who are more concerned with the next world than this one (a clip of George Dubya citing his Christian beliefs as being vital in forming America’s foreign policy is particularly troubling). He’s annoyed by the hypocrisies, prejudices and manipulations that are perpetrated by misguided members of the religious right. But most of all, Maher is just plain tired of people being unwilling to admit that “they just don’t know”.

So, we follow him as he journeys the world in search of answers. He talks to a gold-bedecked evangelical preacher who attempts to use Bible quotes to defend his right to wear expensive lizard-skin shoes. There’s a hilarious meet-and-greet with summer-time tourists at Holy Land, a Florida-based Christian theme park (Check out their website at holylandexperience.com and be awestruck at the wondrous depths of crass commercialism), where an actor playing Jesus catches Maher off-guard with a uniquely astute religious analogy. And in the final section of the film, our Host with the Most asks some very pointed questions inside a Jerusalem-set Islamic temple.

This is very uncomfortable territory for many, and Maher and Charles are very aware of this fact, so they’ve used their years of comedy-writing experience to mould Religulous into a comical odyssey, packed with tightly-edited beats and amusing inserted film footage. Their attention to the golden rules of comedy story-telling has allowed the duo to create one of the funniest films of the year, a veritable playground of wit and ideas which results in a memorable and absorbing film-going experience.

Now, there’s no doubt that your own personal beliefs are going to weigh heavily on the movie-going experience that Religulous provides. Many will have a hard time dealing with the giddy cheap-shots that Maher is inclined to make (though usually in the service of a larger point). I think what makes it a worthwhile, even important, film to see is how Maher uses the film, not as a tool for vindictive intolerance, but rather for probing curiosity. He’s fascinated by religion, not afraid to lay bare his frustrations with its practices and dogma, and yearns for rational thought to find its place above personal ideology for the sake of humanity’s future.

It must be said, I suspect that the film’s latter sections will lose some viewers. Maher’s exploration into the Islamic religion doesn’t have the care-free humorousness that the sections on Mormonism, Scientology and Christianity do, but it’s an appropriate choice for a couple of reasons. Firstly, due to the more serious and sensitive current political nature of the topic, and alternately, this transition better eases into the culmination of the film: a dazzling crescendo of imagery and gospel music, wherein Maher provides an impassioned call-to-arms for “non-believers” to speak up and make their minority voices recognized, as well as an appeal for people to recognize man’s propensity for just plain screwing up a lot.

Religulous will likely be more willingly embraced by the academic, and more liberal, crowd, who will appreciate the incisiveness and lack of pandering on display. Maher and Charles have made a truly great film that will entertain the many. But I think the real strength of the film lies in the fact that once the laugher dies down, intelligent discussion and debate is likely to ensue. And there’s nothing “religulous” about that.

****1/2
 
I want to see it but I have to wait till it's on DVD. :csad:
 
I'm not really into movies that try to be "shocking and controversial" Wether it bea religious or not...I just don't like it.
 
I'm pretty damn curious about the movie, not sure if it'll play in my area though...I definitely do want to check it out, though.
 
after watching some interviews with Maher about the movie and seeing the trailer, I concluded: I really want to see this film!
 
It's going to be shown in Memphis! I would have thought some idiots would have kept it out of the bible belt.
 
I'm not really into movies that try to be "shocking and controversial" Wether it bea religious or not...I just don't like it.

I doesn't go for cheap shock tactics. This ain't a Howard Stern production.

As for controversial, most issue-driven documentaries are, by nature, controversial. Whether liberal or right wing. It's through tackling societal taboos that we help understand and gain insight into our own political and idealogical beliefs/morals.

But then, I suppose March Of The Penguins might be more up your alley...
 
Saw this last night.

I mostly liked it. maher made me laugh, and as a whole i agreed with it.
The only thing is that i think Maher interviewed too many of these blind, dumb people who aren't as rational as most Christians I know. Most were Jesus freaks, priests, monastary workers and the like, people you know just won't see things any other way then their own line of sight. So in that way, i did think it was a little one sided. But Maher can be an ass, as demonstrated by him not holding back when it came to the subtle insults to people he obviously thought were idiots. (actually most of them really were idiots though).

If he interviewed a couple more people who were seemed rational (like the astrologist priest), people who don't take the Bible and all the rules so freakin literally, then i would have liked it better.

im agnostic btw. im willing to believe that their is something higher, but that is simply because there is so much that we dont know, and i know that religion is a direct result of all the beautiful things we dont know and are afraid of. Years from now, maybe when we physically reach the other stars out there, we'll get more answers, which in turn will decrease our fall-back reliance on an all powerful god because we actually understand a little more. who knows maybe there is some invisible man behind all that direction. otherwise, im pretty much with Maher on the all the organized religious practices and stories that seem so primitive now.

8/10
 
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Simultaneously hilarious and frightening.

The humour wasn't bad imo, some real issues are explored.

The complaint that he went for people who were too irrational is sort of moot, the average Christian might not be as bad as some of what we see but they are still complicit in the system continuing and it is the nutters who have the most profound effect.

I think it is an important film to see, it is easily digestible for the average person unlike maybe something with Dawkins at the helm.
 
^This is an important film to see? I am the average person but if he doesn't make a point that I haven't heard before and explains it extremely well and/or he has me laughing my head off then I will go see this as that would be a good film. The trailers were meh for me and I can see Bill do this for free on his talk show or in his standup.
 
Saw this yesterday, thought it was both hilarious and telling. Let's you take a look at religions as an outsider looking in. To me it was kinda like Borat in that the people Mahr was interviewing were none the wiser to what was going on. The only real issue I saw was that he only really interviewed extremely religious people so there were no counterpoints. Overall though 8/10
 
as a follower of maher's work throughout most of his career, i agree with his beliefs on religion.

i haven't seen the film yet, but his general points against religion are strong. put simply, if you take it literally (fanatics, etc.) you are delusional. if you don't take it literally and instead look to it to guide your moral compass and take lessons from, it should be philosophical, not religious. religion is ultimately dangerous and overbearing (especially as it affects the political landscape of the country).
 

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