Sacha Baron Cohen stars in The Dictator |
How do you top outrageous, frequently brilliant films like Borat (2006) and Bruno (2009)? British actor Sacha Baron Cohen obviously faced that dilemma with his latest movie, The Dictator. His previous two movies already demonstrated – filtered through his boorish Kazakhstani character Borat, and flamboyant gay fashion journalist Bruno – the wide canvas of ignorance, racism, rampant political correctness and anti-gay prejudices and discomfort prevalent in America and the world. Yet, particularly in Borat, it also showcased the United States as a strangely accepting society, which bent over backwards to accept Borat’s odd, even disgusting behaviour, as just something he did that should be tolerated because his were cultural acts. The fact that Borat’s anti-Semitic rants were conducted in Hebrew (Cohen, of course is Jewish) just added to the subversive nature of his movie. And his blatant attempts to outrage, in person, Islamists and Orthodox Jews alike in Bruno testified to his physical courage, to go where few comedians/actor have ever gone before. Yet he also fit into the proud pantheon of gutsy Jewish comics, from the Marx Brothers to Lenny Bruce, who, in various ways, stormed the gates of propriety to expose the hypocrisy and intolerance lying inside.
In that light, Cohen has raised expectations in terms of subject matter and approach to controversial situations and material. Those hopes for an even harder-hitting film have been dashed with The Dictator, a mostly pallid comedy that does nothing new and, in fact, copies much of what has gone before.
Anna Faris and Sacha Baron Cohen in The Dictator |
That Aladeen rarely ever evokes Allah or pretends to be pious for political gain, as Saddam Hussein did, suggests that Cohen is stepping back from directly assailing religious fundamentalism and religious hypocrisy in the Muslim world. In a finale that deliberately pays tribute to the barber’s pacifist speech at the conclusion of The Great Dictator, Cohen would rather take a few, admittedly dead-on shots at U.S. imperialism and myopia instead. That speech was preachy to the extreme; Cohen’s comes a little too late, after an unfunny storyline, to make much of a comedic impression. Even ostensibly gutsy jokes like Aladeen’s video game that replicates the Munich massacre, wherein Israeli athletes were murdered at the Munich Olympics by Palestinian terrorists in 1972, is cribbed from Jonathan Kesselman’s hilarious ‘jewsploitation’ movie, The Hebrew Hammer (2003) where neo-Nazis played games like Gestapo Pool Party in one of the movie’s best over-the top scenes. Besides, if you want comedies that take sharp jabs at all sides of the political spectrum, Trey Parker and Matt Stone's Team America: World Police (2004) has already tilled that fertile soil. The Dictator’s general preference is to indulge in numerous sexual double entendres, crass jokes about bodily functions, torture and some silly banter between Aladeen and Zooey, nothing we haven’t seen before in You Don't Mess with the Zohan, or in Cohen’s earlier movies. And some of the jokes are cruel, even misogynistic for no good reason; they’re more like director Larry Charles’ work on the nasty misanthropic Curb Your Enthusiasm than from his funny, gentler approach on Seinfeld.
Sacha Baron Cohen as Borat |
I don’t know if Cohen – who wrote the film with three other screenwriters, Jeff Schaffer, Alec Berg and David Mandel, who also co-produced the film with him – got tired of the concept for The Dictator by the time he got around to making it, or was more focused on his upcoming role as Freddie Mercury in Stephen Frear’s and Peter Morgan’s adaptation of the life of rock group Queen’s flamboyant front man, but whatever the reason, his heart doesn’t seem to be in this movie. I trust he hasn’t lost the fire in his belly – The Dictator is a soft R movie at best – and will eventually find some new deserving target to properly and intelligently eviscerate. The Dictator, however, won’t impress anyone who’s heard of or seen Cohen’s antics, in character, on screen or off. We rightfully expect more from this guy. Better luck next time.
– Shlomo Schwartzberg is a film critic, teacher and arts journalist based in Toronto. He teaches regular courses at Ryerson University's LIFE Institute, and is currently teaching a course on American cinema of the 70s.
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