Here's a review for Christianity Today Movies of the new Ricky Gervais
comedy, "The Invention of Lying." It wasn't till I began reading about the
movie, after seeing it, that I realized it has an anti-religion message. It
didn't come across that way as I watched it. Review is below.

Also, columnist Samuel Freedman of the New York Times was at Holy Cross
Orthodox Church this past Tuesday to interview us about why people convert
to Orthodoxy. That column is here:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/03/us/03religion.html

And "The Jesus Prayer" has been released! You can find it at Amazon or
anywhere, or get autographed copies (you must know somebody who'd like one
for Christmas) from our church bookstore:

http://holycrossonline.org/our_parish/khourias_corner/


*****
The Invention of Lying

Deck: In a world where nobody has ever lied, a screenwriter discovers the
advantages of modifying the truth.

Stars: 2

Rated: PG-13

Genre:  Comedy

Theater Release: October 2, 2009; Lin Pictures

Directed by: Ricky Gervais and Matthew Robinson

Runtime: 99 minutes

Cast: Ricky Gervais (Mark), Jennifer Garner (Jennifer), Jonah Hill (Frank),
Rob Lowe (Rob), Tina Fey (Shelley)


What would it be like to live in a world without lying? I expected the
universe depicted in this film to present a reverse image of the Jim Carrey
comedy "Liar Liar," in which the main character finds himself uncomfortably
compelled to tell the truth. I expected, that is, one more brash, noisy,
agitated film, replete with insults and gross-out jokes. I wasn't expecting
the sweetness in this film, its quietness and thoughtful core. It feels, in
spirit, more like a fable, in the mold of mid-century films like "It's a
Wonderful Life" or "Miracle on 34th Street".

I just wish it were better. I wish the early promise didn't grow gradually
thinner and less authentic-less true.

You could imagine a world without lying taking any number of forms.
Screenwriters and directors Ricky Gervais (who also stars) and Matthew
Robinson give us a world where people not only speak the absolute truth, but
also have no internal controls to restrain blurting of uncomfortable and
hurtful thoughts. At a restaurant, the hostess looks at gorgeous Jennifer
and says, "Hi, I'm threatened by you." The waiter tells Mark and Jennifer,
"I'm very embarrassed that I work here." And Jennifer is completely,
devastatingly upfront with Mark over dinner: "You're overweight, you have a
pug nose, and no job. You're not good enough for me," she says, with the
blank honesty of a child and not a bit of (intentional) cruelty.

There are plenty of good laughs in the opening sequences as we get to
observe what such a unadorned world would be like. Coke's slogan is "It's
very famous." Pepsi's slogan is, "When they don't have Coke." A newspaper is
named "Printed Publication" and a nursing home is "A Sad Place for Hopeless
Old People". Movies consist of big-star readers, rather than actors,
delivering factual lectures about history. (See if you recognize the famous
"reader" Nathan Goldfrappe; this film is full of cameos.)

Mark is a screenwriter for Lecture Films, as a matter of fact, and has been
assigned the fourteenth century. Worse luck for him, because the Black
Plague doesn't sell tickets. As the story opens he is on the verge of being
fired, and, down to only $300, about to be evicted from his apartment. But
at the bank the computers are down, and when the teller asks how much he
wants to withdraw, we see synapses firing deep in Mark's brain. He tells her
that he wants the entire $800 in his account. The next moment, the computers
are back online, and the teller sees only $300 there. Must be something
wrong with the computer, she says, and hands Mark $800.

How you know this isn't a Jim Carrey movie is that Mark uses his power,
mostly, for good. At first he tries to scare a beautiful stranger into
having sex with him, but her panic is so heartbreaking that he can't go
through with it. So instead he begins to say kind and encouraging things to
unhappy strangers, who instantly cheer up, given new hope and incapable of
doubting his words.

The plot gets into gear when he is at his mother's deathbed. She tells Mark
how frightened she is, and can't bear the thought of going into an "eternity
of nothingness." Profoundly moved, Mark tells her that's not how it is; "You
will go to your favorite place in the whole world. Everyone you love will be
there. You'll dance-run and dance." Mark's eyes stream with tears. "There's
no pain. Say hello to Dad for me. Tell him I love him." His mother dies full
of joy and hope.

But the doctor and nurses have been looking on in astonishment. "What else
happens?" "I'm going to see my mother again, when I die!" "Tell us more,
please!"

Word spreads fast. Mark holes up for days as reporters and crowds gather
outside his home, and eventually he comes forth with ten assertions about
"the man in the sky" and his rules for living (scribbled on the backs of
stone-tablet-shaped pizza boxes). His hearers are perplexed by some of the
assertions and take note of apparent inconsistencies, but instantly accept
whatever explanation Mark hands them; they are unable to doubt.

As I've read about this film I've gained the impression that it is intended
to be a jab at religion. I didn't sense that while watching, though. It
seemed rather a touching depiction of the human desire to know something
more--the mysterious sense we are born with that this life is not all there
is. Because, in fact, we are not unable to doubt. We know about the
existence of good and evil, truth and lies. We are able to respond to
religious truth because something deep inside resonates when it appears,
like a gong shimmering in the air. Faith is not just a matter of forcing
belief in "what you know ain't so" (as Mark Twain said). It in an inner
meeting that brings with it its own implicit validation-"the ring of truth."
(Pondering this lately, I think a source of confusion is that our English
word "mind" does not correspond to the biblical Greek word "nous." The nous
is not the cogitating intellect but rather the understanding or
comprehension, the receptive, perceptive faculty designed to enable direct
contact with God.) People of faith recognize truth, rather than reason (or
emote) their way to it. To people who don't hear that ring, religious belief
must look very odd, and Gervais counts himself an atheist.

As the film has progressed, it has morphed from being a comic depiction of
the fortunes of the only liar in a world of unvarnished truth, into
something of a statement on religion, though not one recognizable to people
of faith. Having Mark posture as Moses or comically resemble Jesus during a
dip into unshaven, unshorn depression is by definition superficial, and
doesn't pose any challenge to belief. Then the film gets sidetracked again
by becoming a will-he-get-the-girl story, wholly unconnected to either the
lies-vs-truth or questioning-religion themes. There is, of course, no doubt
about whether he will get the girl. In its concluding scenes the movie
becomes so predictable that, dramatic tension squandered, it is
uninteresting and palpably untrue.

I wish this movie had clung to its initial focus more closely, because the
sweetness of trying to do good by the invention of lying, and the paradoxes
and dangers that would pose, could have been explored much more effectively.
I hope that Gervais and Robinson, having crafted a good premise in this
film, will in later ones be able to follow a thought to greater depth rather
than scattering too many different intentions into an ineffective stew.



Talk About It

1. The premise that people in this world are capable only of truth is taken
to mean that they interact only superficially, for example, judging others
on their appearance. What other forms might a compulsively truthful world
take?

2. Some people believe that lying can be ethical, for example, when seeking
to spare someone's feelings, or to protect someone in danger. Can you
remember a time that you told a lie with the goal of doing good?

3. Christ taught that the devil is "the father of lies" (John 8:44), the
true inventor of lying, while he himself is "the Truth" (John 14:6). In some
ages, people have felt moved to take on the challenge of "absolute veracity"
and never telling a lie. Is this a good thing? Is it necessary, in light of
Christ's words? Or would it tempt toward shading the truth and omitting
elements, in order to meet the letter of the law?


The Family Corner

There is frank talk about sex, and one obscenity. Not a film for children.

********
Frederica Mathewes-Green
www.frederica.com
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