DOCUMENTARY: CIRCUS OF BOOKS reviewed by Lydia Bringerud

Circus of Books
Ryan Murphy, Executive Producer; Rachel Mason, Director/Screenwriter
Netflix, 2019

circusCircus of Books, available on Netflix, is a documentary about Barry and Karen Mason, a wholesome, friendly straight couple who have made a career out of selling hard-core gay porn.

The documentary takes viewers through the story of how Barry and Karen left respective careers in cinematic special effects and journalism to run their L.A. business, a shop called Circus of Books.

The film is made by their daughter, which shapes the narrative arc into a story about their family dynamics. Karen in particular has an astute business acumen, but struggles to square the store’s success with her identity as a pious Jewish woman.

For example, she lived in fear that her fellow synagogue congregants would learn what she did for a living. The children were trained to respond to any questions about their parents’ occupations with, “They run a bookstore.” The family tension is heightened when one of their sons comes out to them as gay. One might expect that, after dealing in hard-core gay erotica for so long, the couple wouldn’t bat an eye. On the contrary, the documentary highlights a duality which may be familiar to Orthodoxy in Dialogue’s readers: being able to tolerate certain identities and lifestyles among other people but having great difficulty accepting them in one’s own family.

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RUSSIA’S NEW WAR CATHEDRAL GLORIFIES STALIN, PUTIN, AND THE 2014 THEFT OF CRIMEA FROM UKRAINE

The walls of Russia’s new Orthodox cathedral dedicated to the Armed Forces will be decorated with the faces of President Vladimir Putin, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Soviet leader Josef Stalin, the MBKh News website reported Friday.

The 95-meter Armed Forces cathedral, a symbol of close defense-church ties in Russia, is expected to open on May 9 — the 75th anniversary of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in World War II — at a sprawling military-themed park near Moscow. Once completed, the building will become one of the tallest Orthodox churches in the world. Read More


J.E.S.U.S.A.: A SPECIAL OFFER FOR ORTHODOXY IN DIALOGUE READERS by Kevin Miller

For context see Andrew Klager’s review, Documentary: J.E.S.U.S.A., and Confessions of a Catechumen and Ex-Marine.

Before we get to the special offer regarding my new feature-length documentary, I want to let you in on a little secret. The original title of my film was not J.E.S.U.S.A. In fact, its original title started off as a joke, a riff on one of the most popular movies of the early 1990s that is still referenced in so many ways today: The Silence of the Lambs.

I know; considering The Silence of the Lambs is about an FBI agent who teams up with a cannibal to hunt for a serial killer who is making a full-body suit out of his victims’ flesh, it seems an odd choice to inspire the title of a documentary about non-violence, right? Well, perhaps not if you hear our alternate version. All we did was take away one little letter. This is what we got: The Silence of the Lamb. Get that? Lamb, singular. Read More