Dogma Movie Review
Dogma Review

"Dogma" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Kevin SmithProducer : Scott Mosier
Screenwiter : Kevin Smith
Starring : Ben Affleck,George Carlin,Matt Damon,Linda Fiorentino,Salma Hayek,Jason Lee,Alan Rickman,Chris Rock,Alanis Morrissette,Jason Mewes,Kevin Smith
That’s it. Kevin Smith is going to Hell. Big Hell, with a capital H.
In Dogma, Smith’s long-awaited and already vilified indictment of the Catholic
church, the auteur has gone to great lengths to show us he can take on any
establishment and gut it wide open. To wit:
Dogma tells the story of two fallen angels (Affleck and Damon, natch) who
decide to take advantage of a loophole in Catholic dogma and weasel their way
back into Heaven. God’s messenger (Rickman) is sent to convince the cynical
Bethany (Fiorentino) to stop the angels because if they make it into Heaven,
the world will end. Along the way, Bethany enlists the aid of a half-dozen
nutty characters, including prophets Jay and Silent Bob (Mewes and Smith), the
muse Serendipity (Hayek, inexplicably borrowed from Greek mythology), and the
13th Apostle Rufus (Rock). Jason Lee also makes his usual Smith movie
appearance as Azrael, a demon trying to stop Bethany.
Make sense? If it doesn’t, don’t worry. Smith goes to great lengths to
explain things over and over again, in long-winded monologues that pepper the
entire film. In fact, the sermons are Dogma’s biggest failing. In trying to
point out the fallacies of Catholicism, Smith becomes just as preachy and
sanctimonious as the institution he’s trying to lampoon. You can’t fight fire
with fire in this case.
While any film that features George Carlin as a Bishop trying to introduce a
new Christian icon (Jesus giving the thumbs-up) gets my vote, and Dogma is not
short on laughs, too much of the film is flat. Jay’s sex talk is disarming at
first, tired by the end. Alanis Morrissette as God? Snooze. The Butcher Boy
already did Sinead O’Connor as the Virgin Mary. Now that takes balls.
Still, Dogma remains one of the funnier films of the year. But more
importantly, whether you agree with Smith or not, you’re sure to be offended.
Alanis IS God. Pray.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





