Showing posts with label Brüno. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brüno. Show all posts

Monday, July 13, 2009

Brüno Review


Directed by Larry Charles
Written by Sacha Baron Cohen, Anthony Hines, Dan Mazer, Jeff Schaffer and Peter Baynham
On general release from 10th July 2009

There is a special type of laugh that might only be heard at screenings of Sacha Baron Cohen films. It starts with a rapid, high-pitched expulsion of air from the lungs, at the moment when you can't believe he just did that. But it is quickly strangled in the throat, in the instant when you realise you're not sure what you're laughing at, or whether you'd like to sit next to the kind of person who finds that sort of thing funny.

Following on from lightweight political spoof Ali G Indahouse (2002), and the often deceptively clever journey into the dark side of the American dream that was Borat (2006), Brüno is just a silly caricature of a gay man. Sacked from his Austrian fashion TV show, he travels to the US with loyal assistant Lutz (Gustaf Hammarsten) in step, seeking celebrity by any means necessary.

So yes, he films a disastrous pilot show, he swaps an African baby for an iPod and names him ‘O.J.’ (“a traditional African name”), and he even tries to become hetero, with the ‘help’ of a deeply bigoted church pastor, and ever-so-straight activities such as going into the woods with a bunch of men and killing furry creatures.

On Da Ali G Show – the Channel Four series that spawned all three of Baron Cohen’s big screen alter egos – he used the naivety of his creations to draw out subversive revelations from his often clueless yet pompous establishment guests. Brüno in particular has travelled a long way since then. Previously, he encouraged us to laugh at the vacuity of the fashion industry, as he metaphorically stripped away the glitz and revealed that the emperor was actually starkers. Now, as a hypersexual cartoon, he offends and upsets exactly the people you might expect to be offended and upset by having queerness thrust in their faces (puns very much intended).

In one scene, 2008 Republican Presidential candidate Ron Paul is Brüno’s victim. Paul is a racist, anti-abortionist, ultra-nationalist representative of the US super elite. But as Brüno postpones an ‘interview’, marches Paul to a bedroom and starts gyrating – apparently attempting to ‘seduce’ the seventy-three-year-old so he can make a sex tape – it’s easy to feel sorry for an elderly man who has blatantly been conned and sexually intimidated. Under extreme provocation, he leaves the bedroom and barks a few words at a crewmember, like most people would. Is this meant to be funny, or merely shocking?

Buried under piles of cash beyond his wildest dreams, it is easy to see why Baron Cohen wouldn’t be particularly bothered by establishment hypocrisy these days. Instead, like some of the worst comedians in circulation, he has been reduced to nothing more than shock tactics. Time and time again, Brüno acts in a way specifically designed to upset certain people, and then they are upset. Presumably, we’re meant to pat ourselves on the back for only laughing ‘ironically’. It's like...vassever. MoviesCapital.com - Real & Legal Unlimited Movie Downloads !!
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Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Brüno Review And Quotes


Brüno (Rating: R)
Cast: Sacha Baron Cohen, Gustaf Hammarsten
Directed by Larry Charles

How can you top a foreign “journalist” who comes to America and brings a bag of his own feces to the dinner table of Southern socialites? How about an Austrian “fashionista” who tries to make a sex tape with former Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul?

So is the saga of Brüno, an exiled Austrian TV personality who attempts to make it in America. Sacha Baron Cohen takes his character to an unavoidable extreme that is both lovable, incredibly jarring, and, at times, borderline obscene.

The underlying theme is similar to Cohen’s Borat, where the main character, through his travels and interactions with supposedly “every day people,” exposes the dirty underbelly of polite society. This time the focus is not on race relations, but the insecurities around homosexuality.

And he spares no one. He “exposes” himself to the homophobia of Alabama huntsman, US servicemen, a talk show audience full of African Americans, and a stadium full of extreme fighting fans. He even goes to the Middle East to “help” with the peace process, but instead gets chased by Orthodox Jews for wearing skimpy Hasidic garb.

Lutz (Hammarsten) is Brüno’s loyal assistant/lover, who helps on his quest. Of course, the real attractions are less the made-up characters but the real people they interact with, interview, and otherwise make very, very uncomfortable throughout the movie. Without giving any spoilers, I found it incredible that Mr. Cohen finished this movie without being seriously injured and/or pressed with charges.

To watch this movie is to engage in a type of mental endurance test of acceptance. How long can you place your heterosexual “hand” over the “flaming” fire before you recoil? At what point of sexual escalation would you, a grown man, blush and/or look away in embarrassment? That is what Sacha Baron Cohen wants you to experience. The moral takeaway, if there is one, is to explore our own sexual hypocrisy, no more evident than when Cohen engages a stadium full of people celebrating man on man violence and man on women misogyny, and traumatizes them with a simple (though a bit dramatic) act of man on man love.

So dads, is this a date movie? Perhaps an easier answer on the coasts (our NY audience ended in applause), but I wonder if the message will be lost to those people who should probably most watch it. Cohen does little to dispel old gay stereotypes and one feels very sorry for some of the subjects of his “hijack-umentary” filmmaking style. I thought the taking care of baby jokes fell a little flat and may distract from the rest of the movie, but overall, if you want to laugh, think a little, and be taken way out your comfort zone, this is the movie to see.

Your Daddy Time: Wasted of Worth It? Worth it! 3.5/5 Stars

The Worth It/Wasted Rating System is for dads who need to know one thing- Is this movie WORTH IT to:

* Pack up the kids, bags, etc and trek to the theater – or
* Find a babysitter so Dad can have a date night – or
* Cash in brownie points with the Mrs. so he can go with his buddies

If it doesn’t fit these simple criteria, the movie gets the WASTED rating, which means – don’t waste the precious time you have, wait for video/cable when you can squeeze it between chores, work and sleep.
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