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  1. Religulous. A hilarious documentary from the director of BORAT that follows political humorist and comedian Bill Maher as he interviews people around the world about God and religion. 2,737 IMDb 7.6 1 h 40 min 2008. X-Ray R. Documentary · Coarse · Fun.

  2. Religulous - Apple TV. Available on Prime Video. Comedian, acerbic commentator, raconteur, skeptic seeker Bill Maher and Larry Charles (director of Borat) set off in search of answers in this raunchy, rude, irreverent, outrageous and shocking documentary about the greatest fiction ever told. From the Western Wall to the Vatican, from self ...

  3. About this movie. In this new comedy from director Larry Charles (BORAT, "Seinfeld"), comedian and TV host Bill Maher ("Real Time with Bill Maher," "Politically Incorrect") takes a pilgrimage across the globe on a mind-opening journey into the ultimate taboo: questioning religion. Meeting the high and low from different religions, Maher simply ...

  4. 29 de sept. de 2008 · Comedian Bill Maher takes on religion in his new film, "Religulous." He tells Harry Smith that religion can be laughed at, and for good reason.

  5. 2 de oct. de 2008 · I'm going to try to review Bill Maher's "Religulous" without getting into religion. Is that OK with everybody? Good. I don't want to fan the flames of a holy war. The movie is about organized religions: Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Mormonism, TV evangelism and even Scientology, with detours into pagan cults and ancient Egypt. Bill Maher, host, writer and debater, believes they are all crazy.

  6. 17 de feb. de 2009 · Religulous follows his patter of thinking about things most of us don't and often are not considered polite conversation. I think discussion of religion and asking questions about belief and why is important topic for the full spectrum of belief from atheist to extremist fanatic.Bill comes at this as a atheist.

  7. Religulous begins with Bill Maher, standing alone in Israel at a place called Meggido; a worthless pile of rubble where many of the planet’s religions believe the end of the world will begin. From there, Maher pushes us into an intense, honest, and brutally funny discussion of blind belief, presenting the possibility that maybe we should all consider doubt instead.

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