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Reviews
Religulous (2008)
The Need for Better Discourse
I had high hopes for this film, both as a non believer and as a fan of Bill Maher and . The film is ultimately a large disappointment as it's too flippant to possibly convert any believers and not funny enough to warrant repeat viewings from secularists. The most unfortunate realization regarding this film came when I watched Ben Stein's cinematic abortion Expelled. While Stein's film is an abomination it uses a lot of the same cinematic techniques as Religulous. The open ridicule of interview subjects and intersplicing of archive footage was almost exactly the same in both films. Ultimately, it's a shame that both these films should fill the same spot for their respective positions. At least Religulous operates openly as a comedy.
If Maher had simply produced the last ten minutes of the film as a special comment appended to an episode of Real Time it'd be worthwhile but the preceding content is mostly useless and unfunny. Speaking of "Real Time," his interviews on that show are almost universally more intelligent and much, much funnier than those contained within the film. I keep waiting for the Michael Moore style of documentary to die out as it's mostly a plight on any attempt at intelligent cinema. While I applaud the level of intelligence that "Real Time" brings to late night television, Religulous is a festering boil on the taint of documentary cinema.
Rationalism is best promoted by increasing the level of public discourse. This does nothing for the cause and provides few laughs in the interim.
Sátántangó (1994)
Tantric Cinema
There really is no way to evaluate this film without assessing it as a 7 1/2 hour death trudge. The runtime is the purpose of the film and Bela Tarr knows it. There really is no way to spoil this film because it barely has a plot and does its best to divert itself from it once it gets going. Even if you know the sort of repetitious psychological torture you're about to subject yourself to you still have to endure it.
Although I certainly took it as a tantric cinematic experience, I won't say that I enjoyed it nor that I particularly expected to enjoy it. So far as I know nobody has ever been forced to sit through this film Clockwork Orange style. As a voluntary experience the film is just a method for the audience to confront its own masochism and the dreariness of its existence.
That said, I think that in the 7 hours I spent watching it (about 25 minutes were lost due to it being a Pal conversion and running imperceptibly faster than usual) maybe 2 1/2 hours were brilliant. Of course, I can't assess whether those moments of brilliance coming later on in the film were actually brilliant or of I had just begun to submit to the film the way interrogation subjects start to crack after sleep deprivation.
The film has some very strong suits, namely the cinematography and setting. There were some moments where I laughed more than I had ever laughed in a film but I think that might have just been from cracking under pressure. I did think the last shot was perfect, although it would have been better without the final voice over.
Also, the one game that I played throughout the film that kept me going was "Which Andrei Tarkovsky film does this most resemble?" While I do think that Bela Tarr has certainly championed his own form of patent miserablism, I did notice about eight shots (amounting to about an hour of the film if not more) that looked entirely cribbed from Tarkovsky's repertoire. Maybe someday I'll edit out the Tarkovsky film located within this film and see if I can pass it off on anyone unfamiliar with Tarr.
That said, I'm... happy(???) that I sat through the whole thing, if only because afterward I got to go for a nice long bike ride and enjoy the fact that the world is in color and I don't live in a post communist society. Maybe that's how Albert Hoffmann felt.
I will say that I was disappointed in the film. Although that's kind of like being disappointed with the melody in a John Cage piece. I really loved Werckmeister Harmonies but I despised Damnation. This one falls pretty evenly between the two, it just happens to fall from space, burn up on re-entry and take seven hours to hit the ground.
In the end the audience only has the same thing to hold on to as the characters living in these miserable conditions; that they endured.