Religulous
In the most recent edition of the Everyday Ethics podcast, we review Bill Maher's documentary . Maher is convinced that atheists, particularly American atheists, need to become more visible. He's also convinced that religious belief is both ridiculous and dangerous. Put those two commitments together and you get an at times painfully funny satire. maher's personality is all over it: he's sharp-witted, intelligent, and a natural performer. His pieces-to-camera are filmed like stand-up routines with various religious centres as backdrops. And his guests appear, for the most part, to be intellectually challenged -- with the exception of the Vatican astronomer, who comes across, uniquely in this film, as an intelligent believer. So what should we make of it? It's essentially a in cinematic form. Find a bunch of less than intelligent advocates of religion, interview them with a view to comedic effect, edit the results carefully, and you end up with a hatchet job (albeit a very funny one). We asked a priest (fr Alan McGuckian), a comedian (Nuala McKeever) and a humanist (Brian McClinton) to go see Religulous, and you can listen to their responses to the film in the podcast or on the iPlayer. Brian makes the point that this is satire in the tradition of Gulliver's Travels, where exaggeration, overstatement and full-blown hyperbole are deployed as powerful rhetorical devices. And, it is true, you couldn't put these people on the screen if they didn't exist. incidentally, 'moderate' believers don't get let off the hook here. Maher says the moderates are enablers -- like 'mafia wives', they make it possible for the extremists to function. Whatever else you can say about Religulous, it is, I think, an important film that deserves serious attention. If you see it, prepare to laugh a lot, and think a fair bit too; if you are particularly sensitive to blasphemy, the usual health warnings apply.