BORAT! CULTURAL LEARNINGS OF AMERICA FOR MAKE BENEFIT GLORIOUS NATION OF KAZAKHSTAN
by Robert A. Nowotny
“The biggest problem we face in this country is
political correctness. Everyone's being so damn careful not to
offend anyone; it's a bunch of crap.”
“BORAT! is nothing but a totally offensive piece of
crap. I'm not going to waste my money.”
The above two quotes were heard recently at
lunch—within minutes of one another. Yes, they were
spoken by the same individual.
As Borat might say, some people could use a little
“cultural learnings for make benefit glorious tolerance
among crackers.” One can only hope.
Starring Sacha Baron Cohen, BORAT! is essentially a road movie.
As far from ROAD TO RIO or ROAD TO ZANZIBAR as one can possibly
get, the road taken here is populated with polemic potholes,
ranging from anti-Semitism, misogyny, homophobia, bigotry, racism,
cultural elitism and religious fervor. Heady stuff, indeed, yet I
cannot help but believe that even Bob Hope and Bing Crosby would
appreciate this journey—because while Borat Sagdiyev
entertains, Sacha Baron Cohen enlightens.
Make no mistake. The improvised interactions are as subversive
as they are brilliant, as inflamatory as they are informative.
There's absolutely no attempt at whitewashing anything. This is
NOT 20 Mule Team Borat; this is full frontal and disturbing
filmmaking. And it's funny—snarf running down the
nostril funny. The kind of “funny” best shared
with an audience. (At my early Monday afternoon matinee the
theater was one-third full, and the biggest surprise was that I
was younger than most of those in attendance. The theater
reverberated with laughter. Who woulda thunk?)
My recommendation is to go see for yourself why BORAT! CULTURAL
LEARNINGS OF AMERICA FOR MAKE BENEFIT GLORIOUS NATION OF
KAZAKHSTAN is a box-office hit. Go on, just do it.
(Here's one hint: It has nothing to do with the fact that the
title is the second longest in American cinema
history—DR. STRANGELOVE OR: HOW I LEARNED TO STOP
WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB—remains the record holder by
one word).
True, you may find yourself offended a time or two. So what?
Perhaps David Edwards of the Daily Mirror said it best:
“The least politically-correct film since THE TRIUMPH OF
THE WILL.”
Just what America needs—or so I've been told.
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