Christoph Waltz was unchained during the most memorable moment from his turn as Saturday Night Live host. In a pre-recorded DJesus Uncrossed segment, Waltz plays a version of our Lord and Savior who isn’t big on that whole “turn the other cheek” thing.

With help from SNL versions of Brad Pitt, Samuel L. Jackson and Ving Rhames characters from various Quentin Tarantino films, Jesus gets revenge on the Romans who wanted him crucified. Christ is a mix between the lead characters of Django Unchained and the Kill Bill films.

When a Roman centurion exclaims “Jesus H. Christ” when facing his imminent death, Waltz doesn’t miss a beat: “The H. is silent.”

PHOTOS: 12 ‘SNL’ Sketches Made Into Movies

During his opening monologue, the Oscar winner complained about all the stereotypes surrounding his Austrian heritage. Right on cue, SNL castmembers show up with their best intentionally bad Austrian/German bits. Kate McKinnon and Bobby Monahan dress like yodelers, while Taran Killam debuted “casual Hitler” — which was Killam sporting a Hitler mustache and haircut and looking like he’s ready to relax at the country club.

We saw it coming. The cold open imagined the great lengths crew members on the disastrous Carnival cruise must have gone to in order to entertain the trip’s 4,000 disgruntled passengers. Cecily Strong and Jason Sudeikis attempt to comfort the passengers, who in real life were without power and plumbing for days after a fire left their cruise shift adrift at sea.

The pair read news headlines which they think will cheer up the passengers, but the stories turn out to be rather depressing. The Pope is resigning. North Korea has nuclear weapons. And “inspiring” Olympian Oscar Pistorius has been charged in his girlfriend’s murder.

PHOTO: ‘SNL’ Recap: Justin Bieber Addresses Pot Use          

Waltz was able to play a fellow European in a commercial for Papal Securities — a financial planning service for retired popes. It’s tough to get by on a fixed income after being one of the most influential people on the planet, but these guys have you covered.

Waltz and Fred Armisen had some great chemistry during their promos for this week’s episode, so it was fitting that the castmember played the host’s girlfriend. Armisen channeled the self-righteousness of his feminist bookstore owner from Portlandia to create an irritating woman that no one but Waltz liked.

“So what were you talking about before we got here? Reproductive rights?” she says upon meeting Waltz’s friends.  “No. Small talk,” they say, to her disappointment.

SNL is new on March 2 with first-time host Kevin Hart and musical guest Macklemore & Ryan Lewis.

Related Stories

Related Stories

Related Stories

Related Stories

Related Stories

ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7qbvLpbCwp5%2BZv6a8zqurnqpemLyue9OvZq2uXaOyuL%2BOrKWlZaKasKK8jJyfq6GjqbyxtIywmKWsqmK2tHmTa2lpamlk