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Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan

Plot of Sample Movie (may include spoilers)

A comedy about a backward journalist from the tiny country of Kazakhstam tours the United States.

Review of Sample Movie

            There is a scene in Borat in which the main character, low on cash, tries to pay for something with a sandwich bag full of pubic hair.  Fine pubic hair, it seems, is a valuable commodity in Kazakhstan, and Borat is unable to understand why the same is not true in the United States.  While I doubt very much that such an item is worth money at all in Kazakhstan, I laughed at this scene.  Not because it was funny, but because it was shocking in a way that elicited a gut response in me.  I figured that I should either laugh or walk out of the theatre in disgust, and since I was surrounded by a couple hundred other laughing people, and had paid almost ten dollars for my ticket, I kept my seat.

            Borat has been touted as not only the funniest movie to come along in years, but a clever indictment of the United States.  I am not at all convinced that the second claim is true, although the first might, in its vulgar way, almost be.  I laughed hard and often while I was watching the movie, but left feeling a little bit disturbed.  Why, exactly, had I laughed at the pubic hair scene, or the scene in which Borat put his feces into a plastic bag because he didn’t know to flush it down the toilet, or the scene in which he joyfully introduced many members of his town, including a his sister, the number-four prostitute in all of Kazakhstan, and a character with the surname “the rapist.”  Thinking back on those and a number of other scenes, I realized that I was, without having ever been there, offended on behalf of the nation of Kazakhstan. 

            True political humor or commentary is scarce to absent in Borat—about the closest thing we get is a scene in which Borat, preparing to sing the Kazak national anthem at a rodeo, makes several outlandish statements in support of the Iraq War, echoing exaggerated sentiments which he might believe true of American desire, but which most thinking Americans do not share.  In fact, I doubt that any Americans, unless they are psychopaths, wish for George W. Bush to drink of the blood of every man, woman, and child in Iraq, or for us to nuke Iraq to the extent that not even a cockroach will be able to survive. 

            Borat goes on a tour of America (some of it, anyway: New York City, part of the East Coast, a few stops in Texas, and Los Angeles) by tiny little ice-cream van.  This leads to a few funny scenes, including one in which his pet bear (which he has bought for protection against Jews) growls at a group of children who think the van contains ice cream.  On the road trip, however, he makes a number of stops at destinations which do not represent a multi-faceted cross-section of the country—he has dinner with some upper class Texans, sings at a rodeo, and picks up urban slang from a group of young urban black men.  Perhaps this is meant to represent how members of other nations view our own, but it seemed more a venue for jokes about feces and pubic hair, an excuse for Borat to get kicked out of a hotel lobby for trying to register a room with his waistband comically low.  Borat also ends up in a bed and breakfast run by an older Jewish couple, and refuses to sleep because he is convinced they will try to kill him.  This is funny if you know that Cohen is himself a practical Jew, but not everyone will be in on the joke.

            In one troublesome scene, Borat stumbles into a Pentacostel church meeting.  The film at this point takes great fun, and wants the audience to laugh heartily, at the expense of the churchgoers speaking in tongues.  The problem here is that this church group is the first group of people to unconditionally welcome Borat, not judging him for his “Kazak” backwardness as most previous characters have.  There are plenty of complaints to be made about the influence of evangelical Christianity on public policy in our country, but Borat sidesteps this by mocking a particularly flamboyant brand of worship, and a sect which is not at all exceptional in welcoming new members to its congregation.

            Ultimately, the problem with Borat is in the characterization of the hero, who allegedly represents the pinnacle of Kazak education and society.   Unlike most of the other inhabitants of his village, he speaks English, wears a suit, and owns a clock radio.  He has been hand-picked by the government to travel to the United States as a representative of Kazakhstan.  In the film, this is the best Kazakhstan can send.  In reality, that is not the case.  The fact that Cohen accurately predicted that Americans would either not know this or not care is the best form of indictment against the United States that the film (as a cultural event, and not a piece of art in and of itself) can muster—an indictment that, sadly, most of us will not interpret, because we are too busy laughing for all the wrong reasons.  {Reviewed by Stephanie Eve Boone}

The Cast

Director

Producer

Sacha Baron Cohen Borat Sagdiyev Larry Charles Sacha Baron Cohen

 Monica Levinson

Dan Mazer

Jay Roach

Ken Davitian Azamat Bagatov
Pamela Anderson Herself
   
   
   

Rating

Length

Production Co.

Year

R

84 minutes Dune Entertainment, Everyman Pictures, Four by Two, Major Studio Partners, One America 2006

Awards

Official Selection, Toronto International Film Festival

Related Links

Official Borat site

Click Above to Purchase Sample Movie

Sample Movie Trivia

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This review was written by Stephanie Eve Boone. Copyright 2006, All Rights Reserved.

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