While most of this movie is like having an anxiety attack, it speaks to the beauty of Passover that one of our only breathers in the film comes when Adam Sandler's Howard Ratner joins his family for the tradition.
In the episode, "Seder Anything," Dan needed something stiffer than Manischewitz when he found out that the waiter job he scored meant having to serve the guests at a Seder at Blair's penthouse.
Grandpa Boris tells Tommy and his pals the story of Passover when they end up locked in the attic during the family seder—a version of events that may include a few more babies than were legendarily involved in freeing the slaves of Egypt.
Charlton Heston will forever be Moses thanks to Cecil B. DeMille's 1956 epic about the story of Passover.
Jerry Seinfeld as the usually invisible prophet Elijah makes a bickering family (Adam Sandler, Kevin Nealon, Mike Myers, Rob Schneider and Julia Sweeney, yay!) sorry they ever opened the door. But they do finally agree on something—Elijah's a real kvetch.
Watching Vanessa Bayer bring her character Jacob the Bar Mitzvah Boy back to Saturday Night Live's "Weekend Update" segment to explain Passover may be one of the funniest things we've seen, but don't quote us on that.
The team break matzah together in the face of flagging ratings on Aaron Sorkin's underappreciated sitcom.
In the season five "Why Is This Night Different?" episode of the drama series, Saul and Allison are guests at a seder in what ends up being the calm before one of the series' biggest storms.
Rob Corddry plays the friendly neighborhood sex offender whom Larry David takes a liking to and invites over for Passover, appalling everybody. But at least he brings homemade latkes!
Val Kilmer voiced Moses and Ralph Fiennes his boyhood pal-turned-rival Ramses in DreamWorks' kid-friendly, musical retelling of the story of Passover. Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston joined forces on the Oscar-winning original song "When You Believe."
Ben Kingsley carried the famous staff in this 1995 TV movie, in which the Red Sea parted a bit more believably than in 1956's The Ten Commandments.
British thesp William Houston pulls Ten Commandments-acquiring duty in the History Channel miniseries.
The 2005 ensemble comedy about an eccentric clan whose patriarch ingests Ecstasy right before their seder starred a pre-New Girl Max Greenfield.
Linda Lavin guest stars as prickly, impossible-to-please Nana Cohen, in town for Passover to both enjoy family time and bear some bad news.
NEXT GALLERY: 8 Best (and Only!) Hanukkah Movies and TV Specials