"Our way of thinking is mostly European," said Tuyakbai, the opposition leader. "For 70 years we lived in a totalitarian state, and successfully transformed our society in just 15 years of independence."
His tone changed when the conversation turned to Borat.
"If I see him, I'll hit him in the face," he said.
― Jena (JenaP), Tuesday, 31 October 2006 19:43 (nineteen years ago)
by J. Hoberman Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan is funnier than its malapropic title—the audience with whom I saw the movie wasn't laughing so much as howling—and even more difficult to parse. Eyes wide, face fixed in an avid grin, Sacha Baron Cohen's ersatz Kazakh TV reporter, the ineffably oafish Borat Sagdiyev, goes looking for America. It's a documentary of sorts. The road trip—he's afraid to fly "in case the Jews repeated their attack of 9-11"—takes him from New York to Los Angeles (where he hopes to bag Pamela Anderson) by way of Mississippi, and well beyond the boundaries of taste.
America, the "greatest country in the world" per Borat, first appears as a subway car, where the friendly Kazakh introduces himself to passengers and, as is his custom, attempts to double-kiss the men. Predictable agitation is trumped when Borat's cheap suitcase drops open to release a live chicken.
The alert viewer may glimpse director Larry Charles among the startled commuters, but by and large, Baron Cohen's lumpen performance art—replete with all manner of public display and daredevil idiocy—is skilled at concealing its tracks. In the most spectacular example, Borat's bedroom tussle with his heavyset "Kazakh" producer (Ken Davitian), caught masturbating with a picture of Pamela, escalates into a naked chase down the hotel elevator, through the lobby, and into a banquet of the local mortgage brokers' association.
Not simply a jackass, Borat (like Baron Cohen's earlier creation Ali G) specializes in one-on-ones with unwary professionals, snared by their willingness to humor a hapless foreigner and desire to appear on (even Kazakh) TV. Stooges range from a self-identified humor consultant ("Do you ever laugh on people with retardation?" Borat wonders) to a car salesman (asked if the automobile is outfitted with a "pussy magnet") to a pair of pols, former Georgia representative Bob Barr and perennial candidate Alan Keyes. What did they know—and when did they know it? Keyes realizes something before our eyes when, after a long, faux-naive account of a Gay Pride rally, Borat says, "Are you telling me that the man who tried to put a rubber fist into my anus was a homosexual?"
How does Baron Cohen keep a straight face? If ever there was a movie that demanded a documentary devoted to its making, it's this one. (Press notes assert the filmmakers were reported as terrorists and trailed by the FBI.) That both Barr and Keyes are right-wing moralizers suggests something about the Baron Cohen agenda. It's hardly coincidental that the antique store he trashes specializes in Confederate memorabilia. Interviewing "veteran feminists" or Atlanta homies, Borat baffles them with his chauvinist stupidity. But picked up by a van of South Carolina frat boys or chatting with the owner of the Imperial Rodeo, he has alarmingly little difficulty getting them to articulate the idea of reinstituting slavery or making homosexuality a capital offense.
Baron Cohen has gleefully involved the government of Kazakhstan in a campaign against Borat—showing up at the White House on the day President Bush hosted Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayev. But his target isn't really an imaginary version of Nazerbayev's nation (nor its enemies, the "evil nitwits" of Uzbekistan); it is rather the domain of the "great warlord Premier Bush," red states in particular. "I think the cultural differences are just vast," the Mississippi matron hosting Borat for dinner at her Magnolia Mansion (on Secession Drive) confides to the camera while her guest is away from the table. Those differences become unbridgeable when Borat returns with a stool sample, and then with the arrival of his indescribably inappropriate date—recruited from the back-page ads of the local alt-weekly.
The movie's set piece has Borat— wearing an American-flag shirt and looking like Saddam Hussein plugged into the wall—entertain a Virginia rodeo with his Kazakh version of "The Star-Spangled Banner." Borat's introductory declaration of support for America's "war of terror" gets an ovation, his fervent wish that George Bush "drink the blood of every man, woman, and child in Iraq" a slightly less enthusiastic one. The crowd starts booing, however, when they hear him sing, "Kazakhstan is the great country in the world—all other countries are run by little girls." (Borat manages to complete this anthem; a report in The Roanoke Times suggests that Baron Cohen and his crew had to be hustled out of the place before they were lynched.)
It's almost anticlimactic when Borat wanders into a Pentecostal church and, in the presence of a Mississippi congressman and justice of the state supreme court, is baptized in the spirit. "Does Jesus like me?" he cries, his impassioned babble lost in the mass glossolalia and the strident "Kazakh" fiddle music arising on the soundtrack. To what faith does Borat subscribe? It's an interesting, never answered question. At one point, he's told to shave off his mustache so that he doesn't look Muslim—"just Eye-talian." But there's no suggestion that Borat is Muslim; his only religion seems to be anti-Semitism.
Borat is not just blatant but proselytizing; his statements precipitate the latent anti-Semitism around him. (The most outrageous example, not in the film, is the widely circulated TV bit in which Borat incites the patrons of an Arizona bar to join him in singing a Kazakh folk song, "Throw the Jew Down the Well.") Small wonder the Anti-Defamation League has expressed concern. The organization deemed it unfortunate that Borat is identified with an actual nation—as though the joke would work if Baron Cohen were passing himself off as a TV reporter from Upper Slobovia—but that's a displacement. Their real anxiety is that by satirizing anti-Semitism, Borat will legitimize it.
It's a measure of Baron Cohen's dexterity that he plants his alter ego on both sides of the Jewish Question. "Kazakhstan"— actually shot in Romania—is a nightmare Eastern Europe where peasants bunk with livestock, torment Gypsies, and stage a trad- itional "Running of the Jew," chasing giant-fanged puppets through their muddy village. But as a native of this barbaric shtetl, Borat is also a non-Christian other who—by virtue of his primitive nature—ridicules the hypocrisy of the dominant social order.
The ADL identifies Baron Cohen as an "observant" Jew. (I'm not sure what that means, but it seems less revealing than the subject of his Cambridge dissertation, namely the role of Jews in the American civil rights movement.) In any case, this comic has a distinctively Jewish sensibility. As sociologist John Murray Cuddihy notes in The Ordeal of Civility, his classic account of newly enlightened Jewish thinkers assimilated into the modern world, Marx, Freud, and Claude Lévi-Strauss were all similarly obsessed with "the raw, the coarse, the vulgar, the naked" and exposing the way in which these things were sublimated by the civil "niceness" of Western culture. So too, Borat (who might add the superstitious, the stupid, the sexist, and the xenophobic to that list).
Indeed, the man who invented Borat is a masterful improviser, brilliant comedian, courageous political satirist, and genuinely experimental film artist. Borat makes you laugh but Baron Cohen forces you to think.
― gear (gear), Wednesday, 1 November 2006 05:53 (nineteen years ago)
― Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 2 November 2006 16:44 (nineteen years ago)
― chaki (chaki), Thursday, 2 November 2006 16:49 (nineteen years ago)
― deej.. (deej..), Thursday, 2 November 2006 16:58 (nineteen years ago)
― kingfish prætor (kingfish 2.0), Thursday, 2 November 2006 21:43 (nineteen years ago)
― Alba (Alba), Friday, 3 November 2006 00:30 (nineteen years ago)
― Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 3 November 2006 00:32 (nineteen years ago)
― Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 3 November 2006 00:36 (nineteen years ago)
― Alba (Alba), Friday, 3 November 2006 00:39 (nineteen years ago)
― Alba (Alba), Friday, 3 November 2006 00:42 (nineteen years ago)
― A-ron Hubbard (Hurting), Friday, 3 November 2006 06:00 (nineteen years ago)
― kingfish prætor (kingfish 2.0), Friday, 3 November 2006 06:22 (nineteen years ago)
― sean gramophone (Sean M), Friday, 3 November 2006 10:57 (nineteen years ago)
― Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Friday, 3 November 2006 16:43 (nineteen years ago)
― Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 3 November 2006 16:49 (nineteen years ago)
introduced to U.S. audiences in the music video for Madonna’s 1998 single “Music”
― Eric H. (Eric H.), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:40 (nineteen years ago)
― kingfish prætor (kingfish 2.0), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:42 (nineteen years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:44 (nineteen years ago)
They’ve given up on the idea that pop culture can be a unifying force and so praise movies that make them feel superior to others.
If Armond really believed this, he'd consider his own status as film criticism's most prominent contrarian.
― Eric H. (Eric H.), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:46 (nineteen years ago)
Dude just watch it in a double-feature with Team America or something
― nate p. (natepatrin), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:49 (nineteen years ago)
What a moron.
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:51 (nineteen years ago)
― gear (gear), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:52 (nineteen years ago)
― Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:56 (nineteen years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:56 (nineteen years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:57 (nineteen years ago)
(x-post) Offhand, I don't think he's ever passed off Spielberg hate as widespread anti-Semitism but rather anti-sensation, or something to that effect.
― Eric H. (Eric H.), Friday, 3 November 2006 18:59 (nineteen years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Friday, 3 November 2006 19:01 (nineteen years ago)
― gear (gear), Friday, 3 November 2006 19:02 (nineteen years ago)
I want to see this, but I'm having trouble not thinking about the tv producer in Jackson who lost his job because he got duped.
― Django Blowhardt (Rock Hardy), Friday, 3 November 2006 19:08 (nineteen years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Friday, 3 November 2006 19:12 (nineteen years ago)
― deej.. (deej..), Friday, 3 November 2006 19:25 (nineteen years ago)
― deej.. (deej..), Friday, 3 November 2006 19:30 (nineteen years ago)
― deej.. (deej..), Friday, 3 November 2006 19:36 (nineteen years ago)
― and what (ooo), Friday, 3 November 2006 19:45 (nineteen years ago)
I was going to say the same about Talledega Nights.
― Eric H. (Eric H.), Friday, 3 November 2006 19:46 (nineteen years ago)
watch one Bruno Ali G skit.
― M@tt He1geson: Real Name, No Gimmicks (Matt Helgeson), Friday, 3 November 2006 20:07 (nineteen years ago)
No variety, terrible pacing - a few funny moments along the way, but overall just very tedious. If it had been a DVD I would have stopped it every 30 minutes to go do something else.
Not half as funny overall as Jackass, I much prefer comedy where the ridicule is internal vs. making fun of people who are otherwise unsuspecting.
― milo z (mlp), Friday, 3 November 2006 20:31 (nineteen years ago)
― milo z (mlp), Friday, 3 November 2006 20:34 (nineteen years ago)
OTM, even in the same SEGMENT as the "Throw the Jew Down the Well" scene, you had Borat teaching "Kazakh" folk dances to a square dance group ("walk like a homosexual", "beat the gypsy", and so on).
Why would someone centre his longass "critique" around a scene he admittedly saw only once?
― NoTimeBeforeTime (Barry Bruner), Friday, 3 November 2006 20:52 (nineteen years ago)
― deej.. (deej..), Friday, 3 November 2006 22:29 (nineteen years ago)
---
ABE FOXMAN ON BORAT
Fresh from squashing the Tony Judt speech at the Polish Legation in New York, the Anti-Defamation League’s Abraham Foxman threw himself today into the controversy surrounding the faux-Moslem comedian Borat. Foxman expressed “profound misgivings” about the “propriety of having an Israeli-born Jew portray a Moslem in an insulting and defamatory manner.” Professing to speak as the “voice of painful experience,” Foxman spoke in anguished tones:
“The Jewish people know something about defamation through humor, whether it be in anti-Semitic cartoons or Shakespearean comedies. Defamation, however ‘skillful’ and ‘funny’ is no joke, just as racism is no joke.”
Foxman was especially uneasy with the portrayal being done by an Israeli-born Jew:
“I have been accused of being hypersensitive to ethnic slurs, but one needn’t be the head of the ADL to deplore the spectacle being made in Hollywood over a Jewish comedian who impersonates Moslems in a manner that depicts an entire people as imbeciles and bigots and wins applause for it.”
Nor was Foxman happy over the national media’s embrace of Borat’s brand of what Foxman labels, “defamatory and belittling stereotypes”:
“Even if CNN and Jon Stewart think it is funny, it isn’t funny when a blood libel is perpetrated against the entire people of Kazakhstan. And, wink-nudge, everyone knows the Kazaks are just a stand-in for Arabs in general.”
Foxman insists it was a “no-brainer to step forward,” despite the ADL’s usual prime focus on defamation of Jews:
“I asked myself, ‘suppose we had an Arab on national TV networks doing a hilariously funny impersonation of a Jew but in a derogatory manner, say as greedy or rude?’ I’d do my job and he wouldn’t be on TV very long. Indeed, with the JDL like it is, he might not be alive very long. I’d prefer it never come to that.”
For his part, Jon Stewart said, he wouldn’t hesitate to put such a Arab comedian on his show, but he doubted such an actor could “impersonate a preposterous Jew as effectively as Foxman does.”
— Max Scherz Unsinn
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 3 November 2006 23:29 (nineteen years ago)
huh?
― kingfish prætor (kingfish 2.0), Friday, 3 November 2006 23:34 (nineteen years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Friday, 3 November 2006 23:35 (nineteen years ago)
still, going to see this in about 6 hours.
― kingfish prætor (kingfish 2.0), Friday, 3 November 2006 23:41 (nineteen years ago)
pretty weak overall. but i bust a few guts just the same. naked wrestling was an all-time classic.
― Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Saturday, 4 November 2006 07:43 (nineteen years ago)
― kingfish prætor (kingfish 2.0), Saturday, 4 November 2006 08:09 (nineteen years ago)
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 4 November 2006 08:23 (nineteen years ago)
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 4 November 2006 08:25 (nineteen years ago)
Considering two of the speakers were a member of Congress and a state Supreme Court justice, I'd have thought you'd be at least a little concerned over that.
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 4 November 2006 08:46 (nineteen years ago)