Religulous: Why you as an ‘experienced nontheist’ don’t need to go see it
Posted by: Waldheri in Review, tags: Bill Maher, Michael Moore, Reductio ad absurdum, Religulous, Review
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I never liked Bill Maher; A comedian who laughs about his own jokes is nothing more than irritating. Nevertheless, I found myself watching Religulous over the holidays season to kill some spare time. After having watched it, I still didn’t like Bill Maher, even though he argued for “our” side, that is to say, the nonreligious one. Religulous is categorized as a comedy/documentary film, but instead of keeping the documentary and comedy parts separated, he blends them together in a nasty mix which dissolved the aspects of both. To me, this was neither comedy nor a documentary.
If it was a documentary, it was as much as documentary as like categorized spawns from the beast that is Michael Moore – a one-way road into a dark abbyss. The only different between Maher and Moore in the making of documentaries is that Moore at least tries to approach the subject in a serious manner. Religulous is also proud to call itself religious satire or parody, forgetting the fact that repeating dogma in a redneck accent does not make a good satire or parody. Maher preceeds his actual “documentary” by saying he will approach the matters at hand with an agnostic attitude, even though he titles his work with a portmanteau derived from the words “religion” and “ridiculous”.
In all his interviews except the one with his sister and mother, Maher shows no respect to his interviewees. He does not have the decency to let the person finish and jumps in mid-sentence with some or other bad remark that was probably intended as funny, laughing to himself as he does so. This is not only annoying for the interviewee but also for the viewer of the film. If Maher didn’t manage to intercept with some half-wit’s pun on the spot, the editors of the film have made sure that the interviewee is ridiculed in other ways. Maybe it is funny and I simply don’t get it, but one has to agree that before the interviewee is able to answer a question Maher jumps on top of him or her. The only thing Maher does reasonably well is ask questions that are difficult to answer for those who intellectually rely on no more than faith. Maher does this particularly well on interviewing the U.S. senator Mark Pryor. Personally I thought this was the best of his interviews, but maybe that was because this senator ridiculed himself enough for Maher not having to intercede on his behalf.
As you might have guessed, there are little to no real arguments that Maher puts forward in his film. This is why I think anyone who is engaged in opposing faith or religious doctrine, either as a secularist, an outspoken atheist, a bright, or otherwise, has no need to watch this film. Many people of this actively nontheist calibre have already heard of all the blatantly unrealistic claims, have already researched religious dogma, and have already heard all the arguments for and against that this film puts forward. In one of the first interviews with some truckers in a roadside ministry Maher did not seem to detect one of the truckers used the famous Pascal’s Wager argument. Instead of replying “Well what if you’re wrong?” he could have listed several reasons why such an argument doesn’t have any intellectual merit. Any one of “us” who have debated theists time and time again would have been able to come up with much better ways to counter the theistic arguments, without having to resort to simple ridicule which doesn’t take require too much effort to begin with.
There were a few scenes in the film that I did enjoy. One was the interview with the (former) director of the Vatican Observatory, who had the complete opposite views regarding the age of the earth, the universe and evolution as the former interviewee, the nutcase young earth creationist Ken Ham from the Answers in Genesis Creation Museum. Another funny interview was with father Reginald Foster, the Pope’s principal Latinist. He seemed a very jolly fellow and agreed with Maher on almost everything Maher said was wrong with religion in general and some dogma in particular. Neither Maher or I had expected this and it made for a fun diversion from all the fundamentalist crackpots.
In conclusion I just want to recap my recommendation: if you’ve debated religionists before, if you’ve studied the doctrines, if you’ve studied theological arguments, there is no reason for you to go see this film because you will not hear anything new. It would not have been a waste of time if it was funny, but frankly I didn’t think it was. I’d say you’d best save it for a moment of desperation in which you feel the need to fill your time with hopeless ad-hoc and reductio ad absurdum.
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December 29th, 2008 at 1:52 am - Edit
Boy, I enjoyed the hell out of the movie and so did my atheist sons and my "spiritual" wife. Your problem is that you went to the movie not liking Bill Maher to begin with and it's obvious that distaste filtered your viewing.
December 29th, 2008 at 2:34 am - Edit
Thanks for the review. I was considering seeing the movie but for some reason it just did not do it for me. I think you pointed out the things that irritated me about it adequately
January 19th, 2009 at 7:40 am - Edit
I'm a Christian (OH NO, sound the alarms!) and I thought it was funny.
Mainly because of how stupid it was.
January 27th, 2009 at 6:56 pm - Edit
That's the problem right there. Bill Maher might've thought that he was putting forth another weapon in the war against Mass-Delusion/Religion, but really he's putting something out there which Christians and others suffering from mass-delusions can enjoy. That shouldn't be the case if Maher had done the job well.
March 24th, 2010 at 6:01 am - Edit
Must say that I love it! The reason it works and was so effective because its a light take on religion with the characteristic humor lightening the entire matter, almost trivializing it, but then jolting you severely in the end. The points that most criticize are in fact what make it so much more damning for religion. The entire atmosphere is that of a light hearted humorous take on religion, with a final revelation that shakes you out of your indifference.
Maybe it helped that I'd never seen or heard of Bill Maher before, which was why I could watch it with an open mind. Either way it works to show how absurd and ridiculous religion can be and how destructive and dangerous that which to us is funny can be. My girlfriend was sort of an agnostic fence sitter, which I have no problem with, but thanks to Bill Maher she's an atheist too.
In the context of Bill Maher, I've started watching Real Time, and although I find him as mediator and interviewer to be too opinionated and vindictive, the show is extremely stimulating, with discussions and debate of great interest and relevance, as opposed to those in most other shows. And whatever you say, no matter how much you dislike his style of humor, he does provoke reactions and debate.
April 3rd, 2010 at 9:21 pm - Edit
Bill Maher. Enough said. The man simply isnt funny, nor is he in any way, original. Watching His “Real Time” program on HBO is like watching “The View”, where Maher plays the role of Joy Behar. The only difference is that Joy Behar has a bigger set of balls.
This isn’t to say that argueing against religion can’t be funny, becaus it can (George Carlin was the best at it). But Mahers feeble attempt at it was a miserable failure. That’s why it lasted like 36 hrs at the box office & went straight to DVD.