Dogma
Dogma is a 1999 American comedy-fantasy film written and directed by Kevin Smith. The film stars Ben Affleck and Matt Damon as two fallen angels, Bartleby and Loki respectively, who attempt to exploit a Catholic plenary indulgence loophole to return to Heaven. Supporting roles include Linda Fiorentino as Bethany Sloane, the last known descendant of Jesus Christ; Jason Lee as the demon Azrael; Chris Rock as the apostle Rufus; Salma Hayek as the muse Serendipity; Alan Rickman as the Metatron; Alanis Morissette as God; and Jason Mewes and Smith himself as the recurring characters Jay and Silent Bob. Dogma was released on November 12, 1999. Produced on a budget of approximately $10 million, the film earned $30.1 million at the domestic box office despite organized protests and theater withdrawals tied to its treatment of Catholic theology.[1] It has since developed a substantial cult following. As of 2024, Smith has confirmed that a sequel is in development, with a planned shoot date in 2026, shaped by his departure from Catholicism and embrace of disbelief.[2][3]
History
Dogma was conceived and developed during the 1990s as director Kevin Smith was building his reputation in independent cinema following the success of his 1994 debut film Clerks, which was also set in New Jersey. Smith, a native of Red Bank, New Jersey, drew upon his own experiences and familiarity with the state's culture and vernacular to craft the screenplay. He began writing the script in the mid-1990s, and the project entered production in 1998, shooting on location across New Jersey and in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, which doubled for several fictional settings in the film.[4]
The film's release history wasn't straightforward. Miramax Films, which had financed the picture, came under pressure from Disney, which had acquired Miramax in 1993, to drop the project over its religious content. Lions Gate Entertainment ultimately acquired and distributed the film in North America, a development that drew attention in its own right as a case study in how major studio ownership can affect independent productions with controversial subject matter.[5] The film opened on November 12, 1999, and sparked immediate controversy. The Catholic League, led by William Donohue, organized protests at theaters across the country and called for boycotts. Several Catholic dioceses amplified those calls, and the film was pulled from some markets entirely. Despite the controversy, Dogma earned approximately $30.1 million at the domestic box office against its $10 million production budget.[6]
The controversy elevated the film's profile and initiated broader conversations about religious representation in cinema and the limits of artistic satire. Over subsequent decades, critics and audiences revisited Dogma and recognized its substantive theological arguments beneath its comedic surface. Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars, writing that Smith "has a gift for finding the human comedy in large metaphysical questions."[7] The film holds a 67% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on reviews aggregated from its original release through subsequent critical reassessments. For New Jersey specifically, the film became a marker of the state's identity as a setting for independent filmmaking, building on the foundation Smith had established with Clerks.
In 2024, Smith confirmed he is writing a sequel to Dogma. He told Fox News that his Catholic faith drove the original film, while his departure from the Church would shape the follow-up's perspective. "The first movie was made by a guy who believed," Smith said. "This one will be made by a guy who doesn't."[8] The Hollywood Reporter reported that Smith has discussed returning cast members including Affleck and Damon and that the production is targeting a 2026 shoot date, though no official cast announcements or release date have been confirmed.[9]
Production
Smith began developing the script for Dogma in the mid-1990s, working on it alongside and after the productions of Mallrats (1995) and Chasing Amy (1997). The screenplay went through multiple drafts as Smith worked to balance theological argument with broad comedy, and the project attracted studio interest and significant apprehension in roughly equal measure. Principal photography began in 1998 and took place across locations in New Jersey and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[10]
Casting reflected both Smith's existing relationships and deliberate choices to bring well-known actors into an independent production. Ben Affleck had worked with Smith on Chasing Amy, making his return a natural extension of that collaboration. Affleck and Matt Damon had just won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for Good Will Hunting (1997), lending Dogma a degree of mainstream visibility unusual for a production of its budget. Alan Rickman was cast as the Metatron, a role that required him to carry much of the film's theological exposition while maintaining comic timing. Alanis Morissette was cast as God partly on the strength of her extraordinary public profile following the release of Jagged Little Pill in 1995, one of the best-selling albums of the decade.
The score was composed by Howard Shore, an Academy Award-winning composer whose subsequent credits include the The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Cinematography was handled by Robert Holtzman. The film was edited by Kevin Smith himself, consistent with his practice on earlier productions.
Religious Controversy
The organized opposition to Dogma was substantial and coordinated well before the film's November 1999 release. The Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, a lay Catholic advocacy organization, began campaigning against the film after learning of its premise and obtained an early copy of the script. Not a minor objection. The League's president, William Donohue, characterized the film as blasphemous and called on Catholics to boycott theaters showing it. Individual dioceses in several states echoed that position, and picket lines appeared outside theaters in New York, New Jersey, and other cities on opening weekend.
Smith addressed the controversy directly and at length in interviews, arguing that the film was made from a position of faith rather than contempt for religion. He noted that he was a practicing Catholic when he wrote and filmed Dogma and that his intent was to engage seriously with theological questions rather than mock believers. The protests drew attention from national media and placed Smith in the unusual position of defending a comedy to religious institutions, television news anchors, and congressional offices. The episode is frequently cited in academic and journalistic accounts of religion and entertainment as a case study in how organized advocacy groups can shape a film's reception and commercial performance.
The controversy didn't prevent the film from reaching its audience. Home video release extended its reach considerably, and cable television broadcasts through the early 2000s introduced it to viewers who had missed or avoided it during its theatrical run. Streaming availability subsequently kept the film in circulation for new audiences encountering it without the context of the original protests.
Geography and Filming Locations
The filming of Dogma drew on locations in both New Jersey and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, with Pittsburgh standing in for the fictional Midwestern town of Red Bank, a name Smith borrowed from his actual New Jersey hometown. In Pittsburgh, the production used St. Michael's Church in the Strip District for key sequences involving the film's Catholic church setting. Within New Jersey, Red Bank itself served as a central reference point and filming hub, and the film's broader sense of place reflects Smith's detailed knowledge of the state's commercial corridors, suburban streets, and shoreline communities.[11]
The production design team worked to present New Jersey not as a flat caricature but as a specific, recognizable place, one with distinct neighborhoods, commercial strips, and community institutions. St. Peter's Church in Red Bank appeared in connection with the film's religious imagery, and the Quick Stop convenience store in Leonardo, New Jersey, familiar to fans of Smith's broader filmography, contributed to the geography of what Smith has called the "View Askewniverse," his shared fictional universe connecting Clerks, Mallrats, Chasing Amy, Dogma, and subsequent films. Jay and Silent Bob, played by Jason Mewes and Smith himself, recur across all these films and anchor them to a specifically New Jersey comic sensibility.
The filming locations became modest tourist attractions after the film's release, with fans visiting sites associated both with Dogma and with Smith's filmography more broadly. This interest contributed to a growing recognition of New Jersey as a viable film and television production destination, a reputation the state's Office of Film & Television has actively promoted in subsequent years.
Cast and Characters
The ensemble cast of Dogma brought together actors at varying stages of their careers. Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, who play the fallen angels Bartleby and Loki, were prominent Hollywood figures by 1999. The two had co-written and starred in Good Will Hunting (1997), for which they won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, making their involvement in Smith's independent production a notable artistic choice. Affleck had previously appeared in Smith's Chasing Amy (1997), making Dogma a continuation of an ongoing creative collaboration between the two.
Linda Fiorentino plays Bethany Sloane, a lapsed Catholic working at an abortion clinic who learns she is the last living descendant of Jesus Christ and is tasked by the angel Metatron with stopping Bartleby and Loki from re-entering Heaven. Alan Rickman portrayed the Metatron, the voice of God, in a performance widely praised by critics as one of the film's strongest elements. Rickman brought characteristic precision and dry wit to the role, and his scenes with Fiorentino provided much of the film's theological exposition.
Chris Rock portrayed Rufus, described in the film as the thirteenth apostle whose existence was omitted from the Bible. The character generated discussion about representation and theological interpretation, particularly given that Rufus is Black and challenges the conventional depiction of Christ's inner circle. Salma Hayek appeared as Serendipity, a muse working as a strip club dancer who provides the film's characters with background on celestial cosmology. Jason Lee played the primary antagonist Azrael, a demon working to manipulate events to his own ends. Alanis Morissette appeared as God in a wordless but memorable performance, cast partly on the strength of her public profile at a moment when Jagged Little Pill had made her one of the most recognizable musicians in the world. Jason Mewes returned as Jay, alongside Smith as Silent Bob, in the pair's recurring roles across the View Askewniverse.
The film's score was composed by Howard Shore, an Academy Award-winning composer whose subsequent credits include the The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Cinematography was handled by Robert Holtzman.
Reception
Critical response to Dogma on its release was mixed but generally positive. Roger Ebert awarded the film three out of four stars, writing that Smith "has a gift for finding the human comedy in large metaphysical questions."[12] The film holds a 67% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Several critics noted the tension between the film's ambitious theological ideas and its broad comedic execution, with some finding that tension productive and others finding it unresolved. Still, the performances of Rickman and Rock drew consistent praise across reviews.
At the box office, Dogma earned $30.1 million domestically against its $10 million production budget.[13] Given the organized protests, theater withdrawals in several markets, and the general commercial challenges facing independent releases, that figure was widely viewed as a strong performance. Home video sales and cable television broadcasts through the early 2000s extended the film's commercial life, and streaming availability has kept it in regular circulation since.
The film's reputation has strengthened over time. Academic institutions have treated Dogma as a useful text for examining 1990s American cinema, religious discourse in popular culture, and the role of independent film in challenging mainstream narratives. Fan communities have remained active across successive decades, and the film's dialogue and characters have retained cultural currency well beyond its initial release.
Sequel
In 2024, Kevin Smith confirmed publicly that he is writing a sequel to Dogma. Speaking to Fox News, Smith said his Catholic faith drove the original film, while his departure from the Church would shape the follow-up. "The first movie was made by a guy who believed," he said. "This one will be made by a guy who doesn't."[14] The Hollywood Reporter reported that Smith has been in discussions with Ben Affleck and Matt Damon about returning and that the production is targeting a 2026 shoot date.<ref>{{cite web |title=Kevin Smith Talks Dogma Rebirth, New Jay and Silent Bob |url=