Borat Gets Hammered
I never found Sacha Baron Cohen’s HBO series Da Ali G Show the least bit funny. Cohen's Ali G character was stupid, deeply unfunny and basically a rip-off of Andy Kaufman's old Latka Gravas character. The first time I saw an episode of Da Ali G Show, I wondered how such an unattractively untalented person ever got any airtime at all.
Just to show that past performance means nothing in Hollywood if you're lucky, the failure of Da Ali G Show didn't send Cohen into a well- deserved oblivion. Instead, he's back in the film Borat, a film which has received enthusiastic praise from at last two bloggers whose intellect and opinions I normally respect.
That's why I was delighted to read Armond White's review of Borat. I thought I was alone in my dislike for Cohen's unfunny shtick.
Just to show that past performance means nothing in Hollywood if you're lucky, the failure of Da Ali G Show didn't send Cohen into a well- deserved oblivion. Instead, he's back in the film Borat, a film which has received enthusiastic praise from at last two bloggers whose intellect and opinions I normally respect.
That's why I was delighted to read Armond White's review of Borat. I thought I was alone in my dislike for Cohen's unfunny shtick.
Sacha Baron Cohen, the British-born TV comedian introduced to U.S. audiences in the music video for Madonna’s 1998 single “Music,” is one of those showbiz embarrassments that tasteless people defend as “edgy.”
His film Borat—in which he plays a mustachioed TV reporter from an impoverished Eastern European Muslim country who comes to America to observe capitalist customs and differences—rises from the pits like sewer gas to pollute the movie landscape.
That’s why Borat, praised as “sharply pointed satire,” primarily consists of genital humor, scatological humor and jokes about deformity and mental retardation. This anti-American propaganda is stupid, but its praise (“the return of evil comedy”) starts to feel a bit seditious. The cult of polarization defends calumny only against Americans who think or feel differently from blue staters. Borat doesn’t dare degrade N.Y./L.A. media-centers or their social presumptions.
2 Comments:
I am a huge fan of Borat, and cannot wait to see the movie.
That being said, I also have a blog entry on him today.
Sorry, have to disagree with you on this one. The brilliance of Borat -- and Sacha Baron Cohen's "Bruno" character as well -- is the pointed reaction he brings out in people, many times mocking the hell out of them without them even knowing it. Watching Borat get a room full of rednecks to sing "Throw the Jew Down the Well," or Bruno get an effeminate little fashion queen to say that "Fashion saves more people than doctors," or make five idiot frat-boys scream "Party!!" while mooning the camera, then turning to them and saying, "Now say 'Hello Austrian Gay TV!'" is all priceless.
Plus, it's just funny. Sorry you don't like it; I think Borat is hystrical.
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