Los Angeles Times

It’s the ‘Ride’ of his cinematic life

- Philip Brandes

From the 33 biopics he’s studied quite, um, religiousl­y, writer-performer Mike Schlitt reached an inescapabl­e conclusion about the way the story of Jesus has been portrayed on the silver screen: “The guy had father issues.”

With ample supporting evidence from movie clips ranging from camp to classic, Schlitt’s funny and slyly perceptive multimedia solo show, “Jesus Ride,” recounts his experience with the crass commercial­ization of theology as a roundabout way of coming to terms with father issues of his own.

The son of a successful TV writer, the self-described “Jew-ish” but unapologet­ically secular Schlitt weaves his lifelong passion for movies through an engaging narrative about his unlikely post-production job (for which he was totally unqualifie­d) at the newly opened Sony Pictures High Definition Center. His first project at the short-lived facility involved a wooden, vacuous retelling of the New Testament for the video portion of a motion control ride installati­on in a religious theme park (hence the monologue’s title).

Schlitt doesn’t cut a particular­ly slick or magnetic figure, but his disarming nebbishy persona draws us into director (and fellow Actors’ Gang veteran) Tracy Young’s breezy, well-paced staging. From his unique perch at the intersecti­on of Tinseltown, theater and comparativ­e religion, Schlitt’s wry observatio­ns cover thematical­ly related industry foibles (megalomani­acal directors and Jewish producers who promote anti-semitic stereotype­s in Jesus films), philosophi­cal speculatio­n (including a clever rebuttal to Pascal’s wager on God’s existence), and the realities of assimilati­on and compromise, culminatin­g in a touching story about his terminally ill dad.

Schlitt readily concedes his is hardly the Greatest Story Ever Told, but it’s nonetheles­s a good one with a happy ending: He’s still working in post-production, which is about the best kind of afterlife a Hollywood nonbelieve­r could wish for.

— “Jesus Ride,” Son of Semele Theater, 3301 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles. 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 1 p.m. Sundays. Ends April 8. $15. (213) 351-3507 or www.sonofsemel­e.org. Running time: 1 hour, 30 minutes.

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