Sarah Silverman: Jesus is Magic directed by Liam
Lynch, 2005, English, color, 72 minutes
By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO, Calif—Sarah Silverman has a dirty mouth, although her teeth
are quite white. Her nightclub act, augmented with some filmed shtick,
is an essay in political incorrectedness. She makes jokes about everything
that makes us uncomfortable: body parts, the mechanics of sex, AIDS, 9/11, the
Holocaust, race relations, and, of course, religion. Seeking to be
"edgy" she gives equal offense to nearly everyone—and somehow gets
you laughing as she does.
One gets the impression that any similarity between her material and her
personal attitudes is strictly coincidental; if there is a message in her
one-liners, her set-ups, and her diversionary tactics (get the audience
thinking she's going one way with her narrative, then going another), it is
this: everything, even the most sacred subjects, could and should be looked at
with humor (sometimes bitter humor) because the world needs new
perspectives—even dirty-mouthed ones. In her reach—stretch, in some
cases—for new material, Silverman sometimes tells jokes that fall
pancake-flat, but even they can contribute to the intellectual ferment that
grows out of unrestricted dialogue.
I've made it a practice on this website not to tell stories that offend other
groups, though I suppose an exception occasionally required, such as in this
story where I feel compelled to explain what Silverman means when she says
"Jesus is magic."
Joking about a Christian boyfriend, she tells the audience: "If we had a
baby, we'd be honest and say: 'Mommy is one of the Chosen people and daddy
believes 'Jesus is magic.'" Since going out with the guy, she says
she has started wearing a St. Christopher's Medal. She said she knows that
"if it doesn't burn through my skin, it will protect me."
I'll stick to the Jewish jokes on the theory that I, and my fellow Jews, can
"take it" from Silverman, one of our own. At one point,
Silverman "announces" that she was raped by a doctor, "which is
so bittersweet for a Jewish girl." You're barely recovering from
the shock of her supposed rape, when she slips in the Jewish gag. It's
her brand of humor. She tells that her grandmother died last year at the
age of 96, "so obviously I suspect foul play."
The Holocaust, a subject for humor? Brace yourself. She tells of a
discussion with her young niece, who says that Hitler killed 60 million
Jews. No, Silverman corrected her, 6 million. Well, really, what's
the difference? asks the niece. Silverman responds that "60 million would
be unforgivable."
From there, she goes onto the fact that so many Jews seem to drive German
cars. Imagine, she marvels, "Mercedes helped formulate a genocide of
people who would become their best customers....Any Jew will tell you that's
not good business!"
Silverman said that one time after doing her nightclub act, in which she
made jokes about Chinese people, an important member of that community was
quoted in the newspaper as saying she was a racist.
"As a Jew, it really concerned me—that we are totally losing control of
the media."