Showing posts with label Religulous. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religulous. Show all posts

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Watching The Detectives

I tell him this reminds me of Stanley Milgram's experiments where subjects willingly inflicted pain on people (or thought that's what they were doing) because they were told to by characters wearing lab coats. "[Sacha Baron Cohen] and I talked about that," says Charles excitedly, "because it is exactly about that: how people react to authority and tend to fall into line behind authority."

Someone might realise in the middle of an interview that something is up, he recalls, but "what are you going to do? Pull the microphone off and cause a scene, or behave? Most people conform under those conditions and behave." In this sense, he says, films like Borat and Religulous are psychological, anthropological and philosophical experiments. "That's one of the things that really intrigues me about these kinds of projects."

And it is not just the urge to conform that works in the film-maker's favour. Something else learned on Borat, he says, was just how powerful "vanity, ego and hubris" are in our lives. Consequently, he dismisses the oft-made charge that he targets subjects who lack media savvy, particularly when applied to Religulous. "I feel like it's just the opposite," he argues. "They are media whores who can't wait to get on camera and then once they're on camera they get caught by surprise. They want to tell you what they believe. They want to tell you what they think and feel. What they're not ready for is to be asked questions about it and to have to defend those beliefs; they're not used to that."

...While the fundamentalists stick to every word of the Bible, or the Koran for that matter, Maher also meets high-ranking clerics within the Vatican who offer a more enlightened point of view. Stories like Genesis and the virgin birth are merely myths, they say, from a benighted, pre-scientific age. To hold every word as the truth today is absurd.

Charles says that one of the most profound revelations for him while making the movie was the discovery that the story of Jesus is an archetype that had already existed for thousands of years before his (supposed) birth.

Unquestioning fundamentalist thinking becomes most disturbing, however, when it embraces the apocalyptic dimension inherent in most western religions. When religion and politics become entwined, as they did during the Bush administration, the situation becomes potentially explosive. Nuclear weapons, and our ability to destroy ourselves several times over, now mean that Armageddon is just the push of a button away.

"It's very simple for it to happen," says Charles. "I have read a lot about apocalyptic thinking and, from a Jungian point of view, it is almost like an internal thing: we are all living an apocalypse, we're all going to die so, in a sense, you want that to have significance, even if it's destructive significance on some level."

This is why he feels it is necessary for us to talk about these issues openly and honestly, and why he felt an urgent need to make Religulous. "I thought it could be healthy to explore that in a dialogue," he says. "But to be told, 'No, this is the answer. And if you don't believe it, by the way, I'm going to kill you,' that's what the problem is now."


-- Stephen Applebaum, having a conversation with Larry Charles (above) the director of "Curb Your Enthusiasm," "Religulous," and "Borat," in The Scotsman.

Considering believers even kill each other - simply because they're simple enough to believe - TMR would say the situation is worse than Mr. Charles is letting on,...

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Why Are Liberals Worried About Assassination? Because Shooting Our Way Out Is Our Only Hope

"John Roberts interviewing Paul Begala on CNN just now slipped and said 'we' when asking how Democrats should respond to Republican attacks."
-- Mona Charen, actually listening to what someone in the mainstream media says, while writing for The National Review.

And here's the same John Roberts - "Mr. Objective Reporter" - without that shit-eating grin, above, talking to Joe The Plumber (who laughs at him):



And, of course, TMR can't leave out when (the supposedly atheist/agnostic) Bill Maher was on The Daily Show, dissing Scientology while calling ("The Lightworker") Barack Obama "Our Boy," and Jon Stewart - "Mr. Impartial Comedy" - didn't say anything about A) how he supposedly hits "both sides equally" or B) what, in any other context, he and other liberals would be screaming was a racial slur against a black man and the potential President of the United States:


And so the open, and obvious, head-spinning hypocrisy that is the Left in the throes of Obama Cult love - all the while claiming anyone who mentions it is insane - continues,....


Wednesday, October 15, 2008

"We Lied" (Another Reason To Hate Liberals)



See, this is why I haven't gone to see this movie - and (other than I don't find him funny) why I dislike Bill Maher: now he's giving atheists a bad name by not being willing to tell the truth about anything but his capacity to lie. What a loser. Liberals can be so fucking disgusting.

I don't care if it is an atheist movie, this asshole (or Larry David) won't ever be seeing a dime from me.

Hat Tip: Hot Air

Monday, October 6, 2008

A Priest: Bill Maher Talked To "Stupid People"



I've heard this argument before, that if Bill Maher had talked to "serious scholars" of the bible for his movie "Religulous" he'd have gotten intelligent answers. But here I am, investigating this very claim, listening to this serious scholar and child of God and he calls the average believers profiled in the movie "stupid". Very Christ-like, that one. He actually claims there may be only one intelligent person in the movie - and that's a scientist.

Not a word about who left the believers stupid (presumably their spiritual leaders) after a lifetime of belief and/or bible study. But what can we expect from a guy who, in the end, makes no sense as he goes on trying to explain how the bible can be true - "in a theological sense" - in our present age of scientific knowledge.

I haven't seen "Religulous" yet, for what I think is the same reason many people who have seen it seem turned off by it: it features Bill Maher. He's a cynical, and only intermittently funny, person; who I've heard, unapologetically, defending quackery (and his politics are just weird) so who is he to be leading the fight for intelligence or what should be considered reasonable thought?

Hell, in many cases, Bill Maher makes about as much sense as this guy. Which ain't much.

Hat Tip: Creative Minority Report

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Just Say "Insane" And Get It Over With

"The majority of Americans,...embrace some form of blind faith. But because that faith by its very nature requires a leap into irrationality, it is almost impossible to explain or to defend in rational terms.”

-- Stephen Holden, in a review of Bill Maher's "Religulous", in the New York Times.

Irrationality

ir·ra·tion·al·i·ty [i-rash-uh-nal-i-tee]
–noun, plural
1. the quality or condition of being irrational.
2. an irrational, illogical, or absurd action, thought, etc.

noun
The state of being irrational; lacking powers of understanding

Monday, September 29, 2008

Sit In The Dark To See The Light

"'I really wanted a bigger canvass,' [Bill Maher] said.

Such was the genesis of 'Religulous,' his controversial documentary in which he travels the globe interviewing Catholics, Protestants, Pentecostals, Muslims, Orthodox Jews, Jews for Jesus, Jesus impersonators and Scientologists. Attempting to put doubt in their mind, Maher instead winds up getting the old heave-ho.

To him, organized religion is the longest-running comedy act around. How else to explain religious lore, such as the ability to speak in tongues, live inside a whale, walk on water or father a child at age 500?

'I would like people who think more like me to understand that it is OK to stand up and say, 'We're not the crazy ones. The crazy ones are the people with the talking snake,'... "
-- Ruthe Stein, reviewing the new documentary on atheism, for the SFGate.