Tuesday 15 February 2011

Marjoe (1972)

Marjoe is one man's confession for a misspent childhood and a dishonest career as a young adult. Marjoe Gortner was a child preacher, forced into the pulpit by his parents and taught to learn sermons by rote and recite them to his congregations. After raising (by his estimate) $3,000,000, he managed to escape from this life and lived with an older woman for a time. Eventually he did return to preach, citing monetary problems. However, after a few years he suffered a crisis of conscience, and decided to pay penance to society by inviting a film crew to follow him while preaching and exposing the hucksterism and sheer cynicism of these travelling preachers, who simply fleece believers of their money. Marjoe himself is a charming presenter, speaking very frankly and openly about his experiences, both confessing that tricks are used to exploit the vulnerability, and openly lamenting that he has done wrong in his life by preaching what he doesn't believe to the masses. The vast majority of the scenes are of Marjoe's preaching, which I have to say I found very disturbing. He speaks nigh-verbatim from a script to each different meeting, and the people are held in utter thrall by his various platitudes. People moan and shake and collapse onto the floor when "healed," and pay through the nose for the pleasure of this intense and socially-pressured placebo effect. Perhaps the most harrowing moments are the shots of bewildered children who show real fear as the adults around them spasm and warble in "tongues". Mr. Gortner deserves great praise for his courage in sabotaging a career path which would have gained him easy money, just to reveal to the wider world the essential dishonesty of this kind of preaching.


Sadly only to die in lightsabre combat with a robot.

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