Browser, 8/24: Ebert on China; Stillman Still Winning Fans; A True Champion; Faith-Bashing on the Big-Screen
ROGER EBERT GIVES CHINA'S OLYMPICS A BIG THUMB'S UP
This is the bottom line: Olympics were a triumph for China. I'm not talking about gold medals, and I'm not talking about politics. I'm talking about appreciation for a glorious world event. About the deeper, richer, more complex vision we have of the nation. They did a hell of a job.
FIRST THINGS ON THE LAST DAYS OF DISCONathaniel Peters celebrates one of my favorite scenes from one of my favorite movies.
Can't wait for the Criterion version! Apparently my DVD of this film has become quite valuable, as it's been out of print for so long.
I'm sorry, but there's one Olympic champion who impresses me in ways that Michael Phelps hasn't and probably never will.
Peter T. Chattaway is scanning the early reviews of Bill Maehr's faith-damning documentary Religulous.
One of the comments to Chattaway's post includes this:
If Religulous does focus on religious extremists or the more out-there kind of faithful as the one review says, then it will wind likely wind up being a tale of sneer and mockery signifying not much.
If you want to critique, say, the history of Science Fiction, and choose to interview only a bunch of middle-aged Star Wars geeks who spend all their money on action figures, well... the problem should be fairly obvious. You're not actually criticizing science fiction... you're criticizing immaturity and arrested development.
If Maher really wanted to construct a sincere critique of religious belief, you'd think he would seek out the thoughts of serious theologians, devoted Christian missionaries, seminary students, pastors, or some of the Christian writers who inspire the respect of even those readers who don't share their faith. If he wants to highlight his own insecurities, he'll set himself up against straw men and idiots and people ill-equipped to talk about their faith. His assault on religion will be, in fact, an assault on typical failings in human nature, not an evisceration of faith itself. It sounds like this may be Maher's tactic. If it isn't, let me know.
Personally, I got sick of Maher's sneering sanctimony years ago, and I'm certainly not going to give up ten of my dollars for the privilege of being ridiculed. Unless, of course, he's taken a startling turn and become a humble, thoughtful host who treats his interviewees with respect and grace.