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Sarah Silverman: Jesus is Magic
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Directed by Liam Lynch.
Starring Sarah Silverman.
Comedian Sarah Silverman cheerfully ignores any and all taboos in this performance film based on her hit off-Broadway show. Combining stand-up material with comedy sketches and musical numbers, Sarah Silverman: Jesus is Magic is dominated by Silverman's typically edgy monologues, including bits on racism, September 11, family dysfunction, drug abuse, rape, the Holocaust and plenty of other unlikely sources of comedy guaranteed to make viewers squirm while they laugh. Sarah Silverman: Jesus is Magic had its American premier at the 2005 South by Southwest Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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MovieBabeMovieBabe Walk the Line - Sarah Silverman ...
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski Walk the Line begins with a train running outside California’s Folsom Prison, its chugging morphing into the thick bass of “Cocaine Blues.” But you don’t get to hear the song, at least not yet. Writer-director James Mangold saves that particular re-creation for the film’s last chapter, when the late Johnny Cash gives his famous concert at the clink. And as performed by Joaquin Phoenix, it’s as soul-lifting as a number about doin’ drugs and shootin’ your woman down can be. Yes, kids, we have another Ray. Nearly to the letter, actually: Walk the Line, based on Cash’s two autobiographies and co-written by Gill Dennis, spans roughly the same time period as Taylor Hackford’s Oscar-winning Ray Charles biopic—the mid-’40s to the late ’60s—and also focuses on the childhood death of a brother, followed by the singer’s determined rise from poverty to fame, then the subsequent debil ... " [More]
patchespatches Jesus is Magic
by patches in Litter Box blog
liked it.
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"Mommy believes that she's one of the Chosen people, and Daddy believes that Jesus is magic! I almost peed my pants watching this last weekend, I had heard nothing about it or her, and stood up afterwards and said, "Where did Sarah Silverman come from?!" She's got a way of insulting every culture and religion, talking about the Holocaust, AIDS, famine... that's just terribly hilarious. It's giving equal exposure to everyone, that makes it okay in my book. She's making fun of everyone, and that's just soooo off the proverbial hook, that's it's like giving EVERYONE a big hug. So many incredible quotes that you want to use, but they are just so out of context that no one will understand you, or laugh. Think South Park, but translated through a female 30-something Jewish stand-up comic. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Sarah Silverman is not a ditzy, shallow, racist, homophobic hatemonger, but she does play one on TV. The most distinctive female voice in stand-up didn't get there just by saying things women don't say -- but by saying things people don't say. But Silverman is not half as controversial as she might be, because she doesn't mean a bit of it. The character Silverman plays is part and parcel to everything she does. Without her once having to call attention to herself or drop character, savvy viewers recognize she's only lampooning a person who would really say such horrible things. Her delicate balancing act, her spacey earnestness, her matter-of-fact delivery, and her willingness to "go there" for a joke are what make her so funny. Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic is a good introduction to the comic, but it's never more than that. According to the loose framing device, Jesus Is Magic is the show she brainstormed at the last minute to one-up a pair of successful colleagues, and as a result, it's an unevenly paced mixture of stand-up and short cutaways. Each of these explores one basic theme: Sarah Silverman will say anything, often the most totally wrong thing you wouldn't expect her to say. Her cheerful songs -- particularly her love ditty that touches on every ignorant stereotype in the book -- are perfect illustrations of Silverman at her best. However, one bit, in which she strangles the corpse at her dead grandmother's wake, suggests she sometimes has no loftier goal than shock value -- which detracts some from her sublime persona. While this performance is not for anyone with prudish sensibilities, those who like their comedy squirmy and edgy will be more than satisfied. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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