Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan
Year: 2006
Rating: R
Length: 84 minutes / 1.40 hours
As far as mockumentary films go, Borat (2006) is at least in the top five. It may have not been as groundbreaking as This Is Spinal Tap (1984), but its use of real people’s reactions to a parody of Eastern European stereotypes still shocks today. Perhaps having experienced some of the American sub-cultures that were mocked is what makes those parts of this film funny to me. It certainly has its gross-out moments, but Sacha Baron Cohen’s performance is iconic.
I think what makes Borat one of the best mockumentary films is its unscripted nature. Sure, they wrote Borat’s dialogue in such a way as to provoke people (or get them to open up about their own racism/sexism/homophobia). However, the responses from these people feel completely genuine. The ones who accept Sacha Baron Cohen’s bit and try to play their part straight are perhaps the funniest moments in the movie. Plus, I don’t know if I can trust ice cream trucks after watching this.
While a lot of this movie is funny, the sexual and scatological jokes haven’t aged that well. I never cared for the extended sequence of two naked men wrestling through a hotel when I watched this movie the first time, anyway. For such a short film, some sequences seem to go on a bit too long past the point of being funny. I wonder if they just left the camera rolling long enough for these people to incriminate themselves and didn’t want to cut anything from that footage. At any rate, this mockumentary borders on an unflinching documentary of cringe-worthy American sub-cultures. And if we can’t laugh at ourselves, then maybe we’re taking a movie like Borat too seriously.
An unscripted mockumentary that ranks in the best of the genre, I give Borat 4.0 stars out of 5.
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