Actually, I'd argue that the movie is critical of Christianity, specifically on its consistent misogynous theme. The way I took in the movie, it was demonstrating just how ludicrous the accusations the Bible charge on the female sex (from Eve to Delilah and Jezebel) - if women were truly responsible for making the Original Sin possible, and the burden of that Sin is at the magnitude the Bible seems to argue, then women would not be able to bear such burden and end up destroying themselves (inflicting violence on self). I saw most of the movie as the Woman (the character) conforming to the misogynous image of women in Bible (as she had discovered during her research), and the near-end (starting where she performs female castration on herself) where she essentially becomes the titular "Anti-Christ" - not the offspring of Satan or anything, but becoming the female equivalent of Jesus Christ (who died for the sins of Man, but not of the Woman as this film seems to argue). http://www.hulu.com/images/btn-forums-submit.gif
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