Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic (2005) Poster

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9/10
Holy cows make the best hamburger
d_alexander5 September 2005
Sarah Silverman is subtle, provocative, and disturbing. Her guileless, deadpan parody of profane ideas is like a naive child faithfully repeating something horrifying that she overheard her parents whisper. Reviewers who compare her to Andrew Dice Clay don't understand her comedy. Clay pandered to his audience's bigotry without irony, telling his audience what they wanted to believe but were afraid to say themselves.

A more apt comparison would be to Carroll O'Connor: a gifted writer, comedian, and actor. Sarah Silverman presents a persona that makes people squirm; she creates a dissonance between her apparent lack of anger or malice and her socially unacceptable material. To accuse her of racism, sexism, homophobia, internalized anti-Semitism, or going for cheap shock is to miss the point. Holy cows make the best hamburger, but it's easy to choke on if you're laughing.

Silverman forces audiences to confront their own gut reactions about unacceptable ideas without providing anyone easy to blame. She is a polite, educated, attractive young woman. To hear her say things we refuse to believe polite, educated, attractive young women think or would even admit is disturbing.

The Anti-Defamation League, the National Organization of Women, NAACP, and the Human Rights Campaign won't laud her as a transgressive comedian who forces audiences to confront their own unacknowledged bigotry. Sarah Silverman is not a social crusader; she is a comedian who tickles your funny bone with a sharp spear. She could preface all her material with, "Can you believe there are idiots who think, '(assume character, insert content),'" to avoid controversy. Gutted by incorporated disclaimers, her comedy would lose its ability to induce awkward guilt in her audience. The power of her comedy is its ravaging of social beliefs that we are all supposed to share.

No comedy is universal, but hers is biting, subversive, disturbing, and fascinating. Instead of laughing at her content, you laugh at the attitudes she portrays and worry if you should find them funny. You either miss the irony of her comedy or you have to appreciate her genius as an actor, writer, comic, and social critic.
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8/10
What's a nice Jewish girl doing in a movie like this?
Red-12520 November 2005
Sarah Silverman: Jesus is Magic (2005), written by Sarah Silverman and directed by Liam Lynch, was shown at the High Falls Film Festival in Rochester, New York.

Sarah Silverman is a unique comedian, and the movie is unique as well. Silverman is strikingly beautiful, and startlingly filthy-mouthed. The result is comedy that is not actually funny per se, but is funny because of the incredible contrast between what you expect and what Silverman delivers.

I've noticed that most reviewers can't refrain from quoting some lines from her performance. The problem with that practice is that if you read enough reviews, you've basically seen the movie. I'm going to refrain from revealing any part of her act. I'll just say that Silverman makes jokes about matters that society assumes can't be funny--9/11, racism, world hunger, AIDS.

Silverman delivers her act in a neutral, confidential way. The contrast between Silverman's straightforward, level manner and the nature of her comedy is what makes her unique.

My guess is that Silverman's humor would wear thin on repeated viewing. However, for the 72 minutes of this movie, she's very, very funny.

Notes:

Silverman was profiled in the 10/24/05 issue of The New Yorker magazine, in an article titled "Quiet Depravity."

Stay for the credits. They contain some funny bits.
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7/10
Sarah is Magically Delicious (and funny)
WriterDave11 December 2005
I don't care that Sarah Silverman dates a painfully unfunny slob like Jimmy Kimmel or that she often says offensive things just for the sake of being offensive. Ever since her short stint on "Saturday Night Live", I knew she was a brilliant comedienne. Part of her appeal is her natural good looks and charming nature. She seems sweet and innocent, but what comes out of her mouth is often filthy and offensive. She delivers it straight with a style that is both perky and deadpan. She has a contradictory self-deprecating confidence that makes her rather unique in the world of stand-up comedy.

There's some misguided musical numbers and "skits" that are never quite as funny as they are conceptually. It's the stand-up bit that had me rolling in the aisles. Sarah pokes fun at everything from AIDS to the Holocaust to 9/11 and she wears her badge of political incorrectness with pride. In terms of her racial humor, she's more than just the white Jewish female version of Dave Chappelle, she's downright hilarious, and her unique delivery is what makes the off-color jokes go down so smooth. The film is brief at 72 minutes, so be sure to stay for the credits as they contain some funny bits.
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8/10
Somewhere Between Lenny And Joan
aguasmarked22 July 2006
Of course there is nothing that could possibly survive between Lenny Bruce and Joan Rivers. That's why Sarah Silverman is unique. She reminds you of others but she's not like anybody else. The outrageous boldness of her comedy is the classiest piece of gross vulgarity I've ever came across. "60 million would be unforgivable" I was gasping and laughing without being able to stop. Dangerous stuff. Wonderful stuff. She's pretty like one of Charlie Chaplin's daughters. Awkwardly so, making the comedy all the more refreshing, shockingly so. I'm buying a few DVDs of "Jesus is Magic" and sending them anonymously to some friends and relatives. Oh yes, my targets deserve the side splitting pain inflicted by this superb Silverwoman.
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8/10
Austin Movie Show review - brutal, politically-incorrect and brilliant
leilapostgrad11 December 2005
I've never seen a stand-up comedy hour get national theatrical distribution before, but I know why this one did. Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic is some of the most subversive, brutal, politically-incorrect, and brilliant stand-up comedy out there. Silverman splices up the stand-up routine with silly and obnoxious musical numbers, and it works. Though it may not make $1 million at the box office, Jesus Is Magic will undoubtedly become a comedy classic along the lines of Eddie Murphy: Raw and Bill Cosby: Himself.

What makes Silverman so ballsy is fearless take on race ("The best time to conceive, of course, is when you're a black teenager"), religion ("The only time religion matters is when you have kids and you're deciding what to teach them. If my boyfriend and I ever have a kid, we'll just be honest with it. We'll say that mommy is one of God's chosen people, and daddy believes that Jesus is magic!"), rape ("I was raped by a doctor… which is kind of bittersweet for a Jew"), the Holocaust ("The Holocaust would never had happened if black people lived in Germany in the 1930s and 40s… well, it wouldn't have happened to Jews"), and 9/11 ("I think American Airlines' new slogan should be: We were the first to hit the twin towers") – every topic you're NOT supposed to joke about. Obviously these jokes are better on screen than read in print.

Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic is comic genius. Your cheeks will hurt from laughing so hard. It's the perfect cure for the holiday blues.
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5/10
Definitely has its moments, but lukewarm overall
totallynatural119 November 2005
I walked into the theatre fully expecting and eagerly anticipating the type of offensive, edgy humor Silverman is known for. And while there were certainly some great jokes (and songs!) that had me bursting out laughing, the rest of the movie only raised a smirk and an occasional chuckle. The ending felt particularly flat.

Some jokes just weren't creative enough to be funny, and I'm guessing Silverman hoped the shock value alone would get laughs. When you're sitting in a packed theatre and a "funny" joke/moment comes up, and you can only hear one or two people discernibly laughing - sorry, those are pity laughs. And there seemed to be quite a few points in the movie where this occurred.

So while I was walking out of the theatre thinking of several funny lines, as a whole Silverman's stand-up was so-so. I've laughed much harder and longer at other comedians' routines.
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10/10
Refreshingly Crisp
bgstahl21 March 2005
I saw Sarah Silverman's "documentary" as my last event at the 2005 SXSW Film Festival in Austin, Texas. It provided a perfect, lingering finish to the week.

The film is one of the tightest pictures I've seen on comedy -- great clips from her live performances, with a balanced sprinkling of scenes about Silverman the person. I liked the use of her sister and brother-in-law to delve deeper into Silverman's approach to her craft. I see three things in Silverman from the work depicted in this film: (1) she catches our attention with stuff that is real -- themes with just enough current of truth; (2) she makes us pause and think with her incredible comedic timing; and (3) she relieves the tension, making our sides hurt with punch lines that elegantly tell us all not to take ourselves or life too seriously.

Those who take the time to research the background of Silverman's sister will appreciate the great wit contained in the simple act of casting her sister in the film. This flick takes a refreshing stab at people and life through comedy. Be sure to stick around for the outtakes – more great fun. I hope Silverman keeps honing her skills and doing great work. I imagine she will constantly be forced to ignore those who would like to restrain her. It's clear that Silverman works hard at her writing and her stage presence; stuff this good doesn't just happen.

Silverman and this film are like a great Zinfandel -- strong intoxicating elements, with layers and layers of transcending substance and flavor.
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7/10
Doesn't always work, but it's edgy and often funny
guyfromjerzee31 March 2007
I've seen Sarah Silverman in plenty of films and TV appearances, but this is my first time seeing her stand-up act in its entirety. Altogether, I enjoyed the film. I'm sure this won't appeal to all tastes, especially if you're easily offended. I wouldn't say Sarah is nearly as good as George Carlin or Richard Pryor or other classic envelope-pushing comedians, but she is good and definitely has a unique comic style (not something I say about many comedians nowadays). I like the way she delivers her profane, offensive humor in such a mundane fashion. I think it makes the jokes even funnier. The flaw in her comedy, in my opinion, is that despite her significant intelligence and wit, Sarah does have a silly, absurd side. Some of the musical numbers definitely bordered on the silly side. Altogether, the film is hit-or-miss, thankfully with more hits. And of course, Sarah is quite easy on the eyes, which is part of the fun of seeing her in a starring role.
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3/10
I'm not sure why they call it a "movie"
apexdawning9 June 2006
Because it's really not. It's stand-up with two little bits of plot tacked on to the beginning and end of the DVD.

I rented this last weekend because I like Sarah Silverman's acting - I was a big Greg the Bunny fan - but I find her comedy sort of lackluster. I'm not sure I can explain why, it just seems kind of forced, like she's in high school and she's trying to get all the popular girls to like her. "Look, I said something offensive! Do you like me now?" Anyway, I was pretty disappointed when I found out that it was not, in fact, a movie, but a "look what I can do" showcase of Silverman's alleged talents. It was the most self-absorbed thing I have ever seen. I can truly believe that this movie-thing is based on the premise that she wrote a show in one night.

So, in summary, great for people who like Sarah Silverman's stand up, not-so-great for Greg The Bunny fans.
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1/10
Malicious, cruel and worst of all, not very funny
glimgliree18 January 2007
Sarah, honey, do you want Santa Claus to bring you toys on Christmas? Then become a Christian. We don't trash Hanukkah and Passover, so show a little respect for our holidays, okay? Everything goes wrong here: the ultra-cheap production values, comedy routines that are no more than mildly funny and sometimes misfire, and mean-spirited musical shorts that leave you wanting to sit Silverman down and give her a parental lecture about respecting other people. One bit with the star running around a nursing home screaming "You're gonna die soon!" to the elderly residents is particularly cruel. Sarah, what was supposed to be funny about that? I'm not persnickety about edgy humor. However, there's a fine difference between edgy and just being a jerk. Silverman's a jerk.
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6/10
Funny, but not spectacular
IvanX12 November 2005
I saw this movie on opening night last night with moderately high expectations and not a lot of knowledge about Sarah Silverman. I left amused but disappointed. Ms. Silverman is entertainingly acerbic, but ALL of this movie's strong moments come from her stand-up, and the air completely goes out of the film when she goes into her mediocre, poorly integrated songs and set pieces. (And what's up with her repeating the same punchless lines over and over in her songs?)

In the end, "Jesus Is Magic" bogs down under the weight of its own pretension. It would seem better as an ordinary cable special, especially if you removed the fluff and focused on her stage show. The movie wants to present Silverman as something more than a mere comedian, but unfortunately fails -- the haphazard presentation and (especially) the atrocious-looking digital video (I challenge you to find a single sharply focused object in the entire movie) make it unworthy of a cinematic event.

In other words, it's worth seeing, but wait for cable or DVD.
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1/10
just not funny
rustyshakleford_4225 April 2006
It's not edgy, it's not a dangerous and daring send up of our conceptions of American culture, it's just very poorly done comedy. Sarah Silverman has no sense of craft or relevancy. For instance, her MLK joke would have been so much better if she had mentioned something relevant, like his rumored infidelities. But instead she has him farting in a car with all the windows rolled up and the heat still on. This is just tasteless. I fine with raunchy humor when it is done well, but Silverman does nothing but spew out an assault of meaningless fart jokes. If it were not for the professional quality of the filming I really would think she got high and wrote this in the mourning to preform later in the day as the into suggests. It seems like she just got up on stage and read unrelated jokes from her B notebook. This movie is not worth seeing, I am shocked that this film could get the funding to be made.
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3/10
Light on magic
rcastl233520 December 2005
When it comes to comedians, the late Richard Pryor was the gold standard. And when it comes to standup comedy on film, Pryor's films Live In Concert (1979) and Live on the Sunset Strip (1982) are the measures every comedian will be judged by.

Pryor, like most great comedians, used structure-- building joke by joke to a big laughing conclusion, then moving to the next subject, to enhance his humor. This type of control is what's alien to the mediocre comic. Which brings us to Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic.

Although Silverman's act is not the worst I've seen—that distinction rests with the inexplicably acclaimed Margaret Cho, it does suffer from a sorry lack of structure. Although a fine comic actor onstage, she seems completely unable to string a series of jokes and observations together to make a point or get The Big Laugh. Hers is a meandering comedy of sporadically amusing wisecracks. Although many will see this as part of her "persona," that stylization: a self-absorbed, slightly scatterbrained JAP, doesn't wear well when the jokes come only once every 5 or 10 minutes.

The film is interspersed with offstage scenes and several musical interludes. Most of the music can be seen as extensions of her comic persona and are, at best, songs that should have been worked into jokes rather than the other way around. The offstage scenes are mostly amateur theatrics that should have been left in the vault for the inevitable Directors Cut video.

Save your money for that video.
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4/10
The Nepotsim Files
glgioia15 February 2007
Stand up performer attempts to be the next Lenny Bruce and isn't.

Sarah Silverman is the bombing comic on the old Johhny Carson show, mysteriously given show business carte blanche a la the bizarro world. Is she offensive? Who can even say anymore. Pushing the boundaries of good taste in the year 2007 means a young woman can now stand on stage and tell "in depth" bathroom jokes one after another without clearing the house. Example:

Sarah: Cause now I'm at that point where I'm comfortable peeing in front of my boyfriend, and you know its kinda nice...now Im going to try it in the bathroom.

Not just A bathroom joke, but perhaps the Oldest bathroom joke in the catalog. Eyes on the prize ladies, lol. To be fair, the show isn't all 80 year old jokes and vaudeville/burleque. She has a few funny lines and even at her embarrassingly low moments, Sarah Silverman remains an engaging and attractive on-stage personality. Her overt charms notwithstanding, the question that kept running through my mind was not, How is "I hope the Jews killed Jesus, I'd do it again!! considered funny, but "Who exactly is this chick and 'Why exactly is she on my television?' Who exactly is Sarah Silverman other than a look alike for her namesake semi-successful not brother, Jonathan Silverman, and the next Mrs. Jimmy Kimmel? Is there such a dearth of female comics that this is what distills out of the machinery? I don't think so. I think Sarah only gets to do and air a bad show like this or get booed off the stage at an awards show because.... boyfriend Jimmy K has got a lot of juice! That is indisputable. Just as Sarah's nonstop passage on the Bad Comic Forgottenville express was abruptly interrupted as soon as she starting dating Mr. Kimmel is likewise not in dispute. That's Hollywood, and it ain't gonna change. Now if seeing the not particularly funny girlfriends of talented people act out in a feature length video/stand up thingamajig is your idea of a good watch, by all means, have at it, this movie is for you!! I'd personally prefer to watch someone with a little more talent. Or to take a page out of her act, Sarah Silverman successfully debunks the 'all Jewish comedians are funny' stereotype.
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1/10
Spare us, Silverman...
jinxmap19 February 2009
Appalling... in a school of wittering idiots, Sarah Silverman rules in hell, apparently. Her weak co-option of human rights should make the most noble of us shudder. SS humour includes such dissociative as MLK and farting, AIDS = lemonaids and the charming imagining of "wouldn't the Jews have been better off if there were Blacks in Nazi Germany?" Her cruelty knows no bounds, especially to the elderly, Blacks, Ethiopians, her parents, her dead grandmother, everyone wins! She likes Fiji Wadder! If you, as I, were watching this DVD expecting a cinematic début of a rising talent and found yourself bored... try this trick: Use a mental computer find-and-erase and for every instance of the words "um", "like", "gay" and "oh my God", renders the entire performance half as long... Score! Or in her own words, "My sh*t... it belongs offstage."
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4/10
would she have a career if she wasn't hot?
changingshades31 December 2006
Y'know I totally have a huge crush on Sarah Silverman. I think she's funny in small doses, and that her interviews with Conan are great. However, this movie really makes me wonder if I would care about her if she wasn't hot. While I was watching this movie I think there were maybe 7 actual jokes followed by a lot of hemming and hawing and just general bad stage presence. When she eventually got around to a joke it was pretty funny, and the audience would laugh, but then she'd pause, say "um, okay", and stall for a few minutes. And this was after every joke. This movie should have been a half hour stand up special and all the unfunny skits could have been dropped and with some good editing, it might, MIGHT, have been tight enough to mask her uncomfortableness on stage. But really, I doubt it. Of course knowing that the "boyfriend" she kept mentioning was Jimmy Kimmel just made me want to vomit in my mouth.
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4/10
"I always feel crappy when I do that joke...but it gets such a good laugh."
moonspinner5526 December 2009
Sarah Silverman--with her gummy smile, coltish stance, and clear voice which bubbles up from deep within her chest--wants to come on like a huggable shock comedienne, yet she's more performance artist than stand-up personality. Cleverly and carefully (one may say 'precisely') dropping taboo words into her stories, Silverman gets laughs by pretending to lead the audience in one direction and then undercutting those expectations with a surprising low-keyed zinger. Silverman doesn't overwork a punchline--which are often nestled in the context of her stories anyhow--although she returns to older topics too often. Also, she relies far too much on pseudo-cute facial expressions and aw-shucks body language to soften the blows of her words, though the topics (9/11, the Holocaust, AIDS, vaginal sex versus anal sex) are tiptoed through in a facetious yet frisky manner. The fantasy edits, imagining Sarah in different manners of celebrity, work well, better than the purposefully-wooden prologue and epilogue with friends. Still, one expects to laugh more with such touchy material. Silverman is so laid-back and blasé, it's clear to viewers she is giving them a made-up creation. Other shock comics manage to make audiences feel as if they are hearing something true, but this personality that Silverman is displaying (playful, naughty, grounded, unaffected) is unabashedly artificial. This is entirely deliberate on Silverman's part, yet is tends to render her act phony: smoke and mirrors prodding at the national funny bone. *1/2 from ****
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1/10
Horribly Disappointed!
todigy-110 December 2005
I had such high hopes for this flick. There was a potential for freezing rain, but I managed to stiff-arm my mom into taking me anyway. The opening 5 to 10 minutes were cute. The remainder of the movie (minus one or two minor chuckles) was dreadful. Would you really want to go see a comedian who isn't funny? I guess, if seeing a beautiful Jewish woman is enough consolation for your admission price, I could halfway justify a matinée showing. Please mark my words, though, that you will *not* come out of the theater laughing and you will be wishing that you had listened more astutely to my cogent words of "steer clear." F.Y.I. The bad weather held off for us just long enough to get to see this movie that turned out to be the real dark storm cloud
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5/10
A few laugh out loud moments, but so-so
gcd170731 August 2006
Whether one likes this movie largely depends on which camp one falls into--the "I get she's sending up all the stereotypes by using them" camp or the "she's just another stereotype comic" camp. Rest assured, she is indeed engaging in satire, but at the same time one can't help but feel that this nonetheless reinforces stereotypes as much as it deconstructs them.

More to the point, she's only sporadically funny. When she hits on something, it's great, but otherwise it's a lot of her poking fun at the naive pretty girl image while innocently unleashing something wickedly taboo. It's a clever act, but it's also blatantly obvious and wears thin after not too long.

Jesus is Magic is a decent film and to a large extent what one gets out of it depends on how one appraises the originality and impact of her style. Once one gets past the controversy, though, Sarah Silverman is largely hit or miss.
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4/10
Kind of a hodge podge of delivery, self indulgence, and predictability.
keyser2728 June 2006
Warning: Spoilers
At the outset of Jesus Is Magic, one gets the feeling they are about to be thrown into the middle of a Mr. Show sketch, or series of them. After the sketch folds into a musical number, some will be enthralled and some will be rolling their eyes. Sarah Silverman is extremely talented, but this is not in any way indicative of her talent, or I seriously need to re-evaluate being a fan of hers. It cuts from stand-up routine to musical numbers when certain lines are said, although, its not a natural feel; the transitions feel clumsy and forced. The songs themselves are amusing with clever punchlines at times, but predictable and go on far too long to retain comedic value.

Also a problem is the comedy itself. Some people think its far too early for United 93 to be released as a movie. I do not. Jokes about the Holocaust or rape or 9/11 or race are all pretty much going to land you in the "shock comedy" genre. But to be clear, Sarah Silverman is not in the shock comedy genre because there is no comedy there. I once saw an old Carroll Burnett skit based on the idea that a good comic should be able to read right out of the phone book and it should be funny. Unfortunately, Sarah Silverman seems to be trying this approach because the jokes she tells feel like a 2nd grader trying to gross out their parents. There is nothing wrong with offensive humor... if it's funny. It;s just not funny here.

Another problem that mounts after time is her delivery. At first, I liked her timing and joke delivery... she is extremely attractive, but after 10 minutes of the same exact delivery, one gets the feeling she's heard the phrase "You are so sexy when you hold the punchline" from boyfriends, girlfriends, or whatever, because every single joke is delivered the same way. The musical numbers also play less as true comedy than valentines from Sarah Silverman to Sarah Silverman, instead of playing on the comedy. More than once I got the feeling that these are the same faces she used to make at herself in the mirror as a teen-aged girl applying makeup.

This was a real letdown, having seen her hosting shows and doing the occasional gig here and there, she never seemed as contrived as she does here. There is some fun to be had here, and it's always nice to see Bob Odenkirk (unless he's on Curb Your Enthusiasm, yikes!) but by and large there is a whole lot of watch-checking going on in the audience. I would definitely recommend clever comedy like Eddie Izzard over this any day. Fans of David Cross's drunken idiotic "did you ever notice" stand-up "comedy" may like this, but for a female comic who is offensive but actually FUNNY, I'd have to recommend Lisa Lampanelli, who may be predictable at times, but is genuinely funny. I'd imagine Silverman is a far better actress, but like David Cross, she needs to stay off the stage. All stand-up comedy viewers are aware that no act is perfect, but this one's golden moments are way too few and far between.
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1/10
Really bad
kaijean728 November 2014
Sarah Silverman really did something bad. She being insulting? Fine, she hates Asians? Well, the entire Jewish media does. Anyway there are lots of Asians worship Htler. BUT she hates and insults Jesus. I am Christian and I really find this offensive. I do not mind other people not believing in Jesus, I never dislike anyone for not believing Jesus -- I have atheist and Muslim friends. Sarah Silverman, insults Jesus and once said she will killed Jesus again. That really offends me and many other Christians. Making fun of Christians is one thing, killing Jesus again and insulting him is another. This is not the only time Sarah Silverman do this.
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6/10
Silverman is Amazing, This Movie Is Not
gavin694217 July 2007
Narrative digressions on sex, race, politics, and more from comedienne Sarah Silverman.

I love Sarah Silverman. I love her jokes, her songs, her face. So it saddens me that this is supposed to be her big break for a DVD. Even with Liam Lynch directing and helping write the song, it just never excels.

Some really good material appears on this movie -- some of her best jokes, and at least one really good song ("You're Gonna Die Soon"). But there is a lot of filler. The backstage scenes are not funny and serve little purpose, the opening and closing really are not funny, and the closing song is mildly amusing but more childish than clever. Worst of all, twenty minutes of jokes are stretched to 45 minutes due to a lot of pauses and silences. What we hear is great, but we have to wait too long to hear it. Cutting the video down in time, or adding more jokes would really have done wonders as far as keeping me laughing.

But there is hope. She has her own show now, which is doing well, and has one of the most memorable scenes from "The Aristocrats". So Sarah Silverman is just getting started, I think. Her next DVD, should there be one, will likely blow us all away.
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2/10
Not Funny At All
titus21313 November 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This movie is hardly funny at all. In addition to offensive jokes about ethnic groups, religious groups and even the Holocaust, Sarah often uses gratuitous obscene language that adds nothing. Many of the jokes are also lame. At one point, Silverman says, "When God gives you AIDS, make LemonAIDS." Explain to me how that is really funny or particularly creative. It's a lame joke delivered by a smirking idiot.

Contrary to what one writer says here, there are no "insights" into how Sarah Silverman creates her routines. Nor are there any insights into her real life backstage, or her relationship with her sister. Silverman plays everything for a spoof. It's all an act! That's okay, but even her backstage jokes about real people are pretty lame and fairly lewd. The few clean and innocent jokes in this movie turn out to be the funniest ones, but they are very few.
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Sarah's Only Okay
Hammeranvil11 November 2005
I think the only people who would really find her work refreshing are people who are too used to lying and believing lies about social conditions and beliefs.

Too many of the people she pokes fun at (minorities, rights organizations etc.) are well aware that most people are bigoted and racist and are firmly committed to hiding this fact by confining their personal hatreds to what they think are subtle, undetectable acts of prejudice. Her comedy loses it's punch on people who have no illusions about what people think and what they say in their hearts or behind closed doors.

In other words, if you're well aware that most of the people smiling in your face are racist, bigoted bastards ... someone informing you of this fact isn't going to wow you all that much.
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