Rating: R
Genre:
Comedy
Theatrical Release: 11/12/1999(USA)
Release Date: 03/11/2008
SubTitles: Espanol/French/English
Dubbed: English/French
Sound: DD5.1
Run Time: 128 Minutes
Flags: Violence, Adult Situations, Adult Humor, Profanity
Distributor/Studio: Sony Pictures
Would you believe that the last living descendent of Jesus Christ is a woman working at an abortion clinic in Illinois? And that she's been sent on a holy mission with two minor characters from
Clerks and
Mallrats as her guides? Prepare to suspend any and all disbelief as you watch the religious
satire Dogma, the fourth film from writer/director
Kevin Smith.
Bethany (
Linda Fiorentino) has been disappointed in life and has found her faith severely tested after her husband leaves her when she discovers she cannot have children. So
Bethany is all the more puzzled when she's approached by
Metatron (
Alan Rickman), a grumpy angel.
Metatron wants her to help him stop
Bartleby (
Ben Affleck) and
Loki (
Matt Damon), two fallen angels who were ejected from paradise, have escaped from exile and are heading to New Jersey. If they are able to pass through the arc of a certain church, it will prove God is fallible and the world will come to a swift end.
Bethany has no idea what to do or why she's been given this project, but she heads out anyway, with her assigned assistants
Jay (
Jason Mewes), an appallingly rude former dope dealer and self-styled ladies man, and
Silent Bob (
Kevin Smith). Along the way,
Bethany picks up more helpers, including a celestial muse named
Serendipity (
Salma Hayek) and
Rufus (
Chris Rock), who claims to have been the 13th apostle and that Jesus owes him 12 dollars. Boasting a huge supporting cast -- including
George Carlin,
Jason Lee,
Janeane Garofalo,
Bud Cort, and
Alanis Morissette (as God) --
Dogma proved to be highly controversial even before its release.
Miramax Pictures, owned by
Disney, financed the film, but several weeks before
Dogma's world premier at the
Cannes Film Festival, they announced they would not release the picture and intended to sell it to another distributor (which would turn out to be
Lions Gate Films). Director
Smith, however, has always contended that
Dogma is a film about the importance of faith, if not organized religion.
~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide