An Atheist Walks Into a Bar …

Article Tools

email E-mail Article
print Printer Format

Watch the trailer for Religulous

Director and showboat make a nifty team. Charles is a character: formerly a writer on Seinfeld (the most atheistic show ever broadcast on network television), he tends to dress in the manner of a down-at-heel warlock or a disguised Balkan despot. We glimpse him occasionally at the rim of the action, shrouded in coats and wielding an enormous beard. Maher by contrast is all slickness and centrality—brilliantined, bespoke, with that pampered chuckle and long, connoisseurial nose. Together they are determined to get to the bottom of this religion thing: What is it? Why are we so crazy about it? What the hell? Heavy questions, but my sense is that audiences, having been mentally tenderized over the summer by the bozo profundities of The Dark Knight, are ready for this. (Did you hear the rapturous hush during Heath Ledger’s sermon on chaos?)

The jokes are almost too easy, as Maher acknowledges: barn door—shotgun—kaboom. At Speaker’s Corner, the famous pressure valve of British democracy on the edge of London’s Hyde Park, he dresses up as a bum and rantingly proclaims the truth of Scientology (Thetans! … E-meters!). Medieval scenes ensue as the mob jeers and then crowns him, Feast of Fools–style, with a hat made of balloons. Half the time, all Charles needs to do is point the camera: the Institute for Science and Halacha, in Jerusalem, is a mad nest of creaking, puffing, Sabbath-circumventing machines—no commentary required. José Luis De Jesús Miranda, head of the International Ministry Growing in Grace and direct descendant of Christ, appears in a green suit against a yellow background, showing cocaine-white teeth. At the Holy Land Experience, in Orlando, Florida, a man in a House of Blues T-shirt aims a desultory camcorder at a staggering, bloodied Jesus; George Saunders couldn’t have written it better.

Religulous should make the faithful wince. The average Christian—as if we needed reminding—makes a piss-poor apologist for his own faith. One might expect a doctrine as insolently extraordinary in its claims as Christianity to have produced some tip-top debaters, but oh dear, Maher has them on the ropes in seconds. We can perhaps forgive Steve Berg, ex–Jew for Jesus, for being temporarily unable to instruct Maher on the difference between believing in God and believing in Santa Claus. But what about Democratic Senator Mark Pryor of Arkansas, who hazards a half-assed defense of creationism (“Well, I believe the scientific community is still divided on that …”) before clamming up altogether, frozen-­faced at his own idiocy? Even Dr. Francis Collins, the former director of the Human Genome Project, appears unprepared for the Maher assault. The nimblest controversialist in the movie, curiously, turns out to be the guy who dresses up as Jesus at the Holy Land Experience. Robed and sandaled in full Redeemer drag, he deals with Maher unflappably. The doctrine of the Trinity? “It’s like water, Bill. It can be ice, steam, or water—three things in one!” (“A brilliant analogy,” Maher later confesses.) Justifying the ways of God to man? “Like trying to explain the workings of a TV set to an ant.” And when this husky Christ with the puppy-dog eyes begins to speak of the “God-sized hole” in Bill Maher, even Bill looks a little worried.

Can an atheist go on a spiritual journey? Maher was raised Catholic, with a Jewish mother. He interviews her for his movie: Religion, she says, “only told you good things. Or so I thought.” “But it’s so shamelessly invented!” he complains. “Well,” she concedes, “we can say that now.” In tantalizing glimpses of autobiography, Maher reveals that as late as age 40 (he is 52), he was still “making deals” with God. So what happened? Standing on the baked stones of Megiddo, snorting at the Second Coming, he seems fully formed—as secure in his American irony as Twain or any of them. But what formed him, exactly?

I like Maher best when he’s bringing his own brand of acidulous biblical witness to bear. Reminding the glossily appareled Jeremiah Cummings, the head of the Worldwide International Campaign for Christ, that Saint Paul traveled with only the shirt on his back, he asks, “Should I assume that this is the only $2,000 suit you own?” To John Westcott, of the gay-conversion outfit Exchange Ministries, he submits the fact that Jesus had precisely nothing to say about homosexuality. Most stirringly, when several large working-class men at a roadside truckers chapel not only decline to beat him up but instead offer a sincere prayer that his questions will be answered, Maher thanks them for being “Christlike, and not just Christian.” After moments like this, the movie’s ending—in which Maher bellows antireligious anathemas (“Grow up or die!”) over mushroom clouds and distant boomings of Nietzschean dynamite—seems a little heavy-metal.

Being a manipulatively liberal sort of polemic, Religulous will doubtless be compared with the work of Michael Moore. The film it’s closest to, however, is the much-scorned Expelled—a work of creationist propaganda, starring Ben Stein, that was released earlier this year and seen primarily by journalists and cranks. Both movies feature a laconic/comedic narrator, a series of unintentionally self-satirizing interviewees, a sprinkling of “experts,” and a concluding sequence that is orchestral and declamatory. Both make use of vintage footage and slapstick sound effects. Maher’s is much better, but formally they differ only in that Expelled operates out of a central, completely loony metaphor—that science and faith have been divided by a “Berlin Wall” of materialist ideology—and Religulous does not. (Its makers, we might say, are constitutionally unmetaphorical.)

Ours is an age between ages, a halfway house whose symptoms are detectable everywhere. The plastic fork, fast food’s chief instrument, has so degenerated that it can no longer perform the stern office of a fork but instead bends like a stage prop when you try to get something on the end of it. The Yellow Pages continues to arrive with a loyal thump on the doorstep, despite the fact that it is going directly into the recycling bin. And what we believe in, generally speaking, is a wishy-washy snooze-button humanism. To this last debility, no sharper corrective currently exists than the American comic atheist. He energizes the secular man, and puts the believer on his mettle. I don’t happen to agree with him—that certain things should modestly withdraw before the peashooter of the intellect is not, to my mind, proof of their nonexistence. I’m for the leap of faith. But I’m grateful that he’s out there, alive and well and pointing a pitiless camera—our aboriginal exploder of idols, bless him.

Pages: <prev 1 2

James Parker is an Atlantic correspondent.

Article Tools

email E-mail Article
Printer Format
Share

Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter.

 

From the Archives

March 2003

Kicking the Secularist Habit

A six-step program.

March 2008

And The Winner Is...

Our secular future.

July/August 2008

Mass-Market Atheism

From Atlantic Unbound

July 12, 2007

Transcending God

Christopher Hitchens on his beef with religion, his faith in mankind, and his new bestselling book, God Is Not Great.

February 25, 2008

Finding a Place for God

Atlantic contributors from throughout the past century question the value of religion in a scientific world.

Also By

James Parker

November 2009

Retching With the Stars

The addictive appeal of Dr. Drew Pinsky’s Celebrity Rehab

October 2009

Sing to the Lord a New Song

Among the young believers at the new Christian-rock hot spot.

October 2009

Brit Wit

The comic invasion of Ricky Gervais and Russell Brand.


Name

Address 1

Address 2

City

State Zip

Email