BORAT
(Cultural
Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan)
Directed by: Larry Charles (of Seinfeld fame)
Internet
Movie
Database Entry for full details
GRADE: A/A- (3.5/4)
2006.
First, it should be
noted that Borat
begs to be seen in theaters – it functions
at its best as a shared social experience. About a week after its
initial, limited
New York release shows were still sold out all over town, as they had
been all week (and this was on a
weeknight mind you.) We had to do a bit of theater-hopping
before we found a showing with available tickets, but even then we had
to buy them two hours in advance. Forty-five minutes before
every showtime at the Village East, long ticketholder lines stretched down Second Ave. and
around Twelfth Street – Borat is a cultural happening!
During the previews, members of the audience repeatedly called for
Borat, as though his creator, Sacha Baron Cohen, were anxiously waiting
behind the screen to make his entrance. As the opening credits finally started to roll, applause erupted as though he had.
The Borat segments of Da Ali G Show,
Cohen’s HBO series that
had its origins on English television, were always the cleverest.
Just
the sound of Borat’s voice is enough to start an audience
giggling – college kids have been doing impressions at
parties for years ("Niiiice"). When that accent is complemented
by masterfully crafted broken English (see the film’s
subtitle), precise comedic instincts and a frank expression of
prejudicial inclinations, the result is so hilarious that it's easy to
overlook the potentially offensive content.
The film disguises itself as a documentary, following ersatz
Kazakhstani
telejournalist Borat Sagdiyev as he interviews Americans for the
ostensible purpose of, well,
accumulating cultural learnings for make benefit his audience
back-home. He
decides to leave New York, where they are scheduled to do their
filming, and travel to Los Angeles (by car and not by
plane, just in case the Jews "should...repeat their attack of 9/11") so
he can meet, and marry, Pamela Anderson. On the way he creates an
American road movie unlike any you could've even imagined.
Whereas Borat’s bigotry is consistently conspicuous, his American
interlocutors’ is generally not. Americans nowadays are
more surreptitious with their prejudices than they were in the past
(George Allen aside) -- the
film’s success is in coaxing them out. Much of the
humor though, such as the already famous nude wrestling scene between
Borat
and his producer, is not political; many scenes are
played merely for hilarity’s sake.
But much of the
film’s humor derives from Borat’s blunt racism (and
sexism), not in virtue of itself necessarily but because of the
responses it elicits. While anti-defamation leagues have
criticized the
film for its nonchalant chauvinism, it’s the heart of the
film’s satirical commentary. Borat is not just funny, it's intelligent. When Borat asks a Southern gun dealer what
the best gun for killing Jews is, he gets not one but two
straightforward recommendations. Similarly, when he asks a
car salesman how fast an SUV would need to be moving in order to kill a
group of gypsies, he is given an honest answer: about forty miles an
hour. He is even able to rouse a stadium’s worth of
rodeo spectators to enthusiastically applaud the prayer, “may
George Bush drink the blood of every man, woman, and child in
Iraq.” The film borders on the terrifying, but not
because of Borat – he’s obviously kidding, but the
man at the rodeo who suggests that lynching homosexuals is something
“we’re trying to get done in this
country”, or the drunken fratboys who advocate a return to
slavery, are not.
While it’s possible, as Anthony Lane worries, that the film
may be misunderstood or misappropriated asatircally by denser
audiences, that only further
validates the film’s display of American culture as forever
entrenched in racism, whether blatant or slightly hidden below the
surface. After all, when Borat mistakes an Oliver Hardy
impersonator in Hollywood for an Adolph Hitler impersonator, it is not
so much due to his own anti-Semitism as it is that, based on his
experiences hitherto, he expects it of
Americans. That isn’t Cohen’s fault,
it’s ours. --
Henry Stewart
See
Kazakhstan's Wikipedia Entry
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