Posted by
JP on Sunday, October 12, 2008 12:00:00 AM
by Craig J. Hazen [guest, academic]
Comedy
tastes change over time. I’m sure a water-squirting daisy on a jacket
lapel was a riot in its day. Knock-knock jokes kept me and my friends
pretty entertained in second grade. And I’m sure Henny Youngman would
not get the same laughs today if he were still alive doing stand up.
The new film Religulous starring comedian Bill Maher (HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher) and directed by Larry Charles (Borat, Curb Your Enthusiasm)
seemed to fall pretty flat in the laughs department—like it was
appealing to an audience that may have been amused by it twenty years
ago. I was struck by how little laughter there was among those in the
opening-weekend crowd. (In terms of magnitude, I use the word “crowd”
here in the sense of the “crowd” that might attend a Joe Biden campaign
rally.) Religulous was showing in the smallest theater in the
multiplex (not much bigger than the “truck-driver’s chapel” that
appeared in the film) and even then it was only about a third full. Read the rest of this entry »