image Anal bleaching, when you learn about it for the first time, is one of those things that make you think life is passing you by, though not enough to make you want to investigate in more depth.  It turns out that people pay for it and others get paid for doing it – probably not nearly enough. Anyone wanting to find out more about the subject can learn as much as you reasonably need to know in one of the more decorous scenes in Brüno, Sacha Baron Cohen’s telling of the commonplace story of a gay fashion reporter seeking to make himself famous in the United States.

If your first test of a comedy film is “does it make a few hundred people laugh out loud on several occasions in a cinema?” then Brüno works. Better still they were laughing at all the right things. Maybe this is because the targets in Baron Cohen’s sights are the idiots who work in the higher levels of the fashion industry, fame seekers and militant homophobes. He manages to get one model to share that she feels she has the hardest job in the world on account of having to remember to put the left leg in front of the right let and then turn around and points out to a pastor whose mission is to make gays straight that he has “terrific blow job lips”. His words, not mine. The pastor we should note says that his lips are there only to praise Jesus.

Baron Cohen’s commitment to method acting makes Marlon Brando look like an extra on Emmerdale. The bleaching scene when he’s talking to his agent at the other end of the phone seemed real enough and judging by the expression on the face of the medium as Brüno orally pleasures the spirit of the dead one from Milli Vanilli the actor was really in the moment. He even tries to bring peace to the Middle East though his makeover of the Hasidic outfit into hotpants and three quarter length shirt is not likely to catch on in Jerusalem.

Mrs Mac was of the view that Brüno lacked some of the depth and subtlety of Borat. Maybe so but it avoided the temptation of stretching the concept out too long which is the ruination of many a good film. Now even though it’s absent from much of the publicity I think you can make a defensible case that Brüno is quite a subversive piece of work taking potshots at notions of race, celebrity culture and mostly homophobia. Having adopted an African baby Brüno interviews parents  who want to launch their own kids’ modelling careers in a  photoshoot which will involve stinging insects, operating heavy machinery and handling phosphorous. They all agree. The result was worth it and we get to see the black child on a crucifix with the white kids dressed as Roman soldiers. On so many levels it was funny, subversive and inspired.

Brüno rampages through some of the most homophobic intuitions in the United State, churches, that weird phony wrestling and Alabama hunters. It’s the audience reactions which makes the film. As the gay hating wrestling fans break into tears of rage and start throwing everything they can grab into the ring Brüno starts getting on with his fight partner. The cinema audience was completely on the side of the two gay men and the homophobes were left looking like dinosaurs. Isn’t that progress?

 

17 responses to “Brüno”

  1. I’m going to have to google anal bleaching now, you do realise that?

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  2. It really is best if you don’t.

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  3. predictably socialist worker panned this film for being homophobic ?

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  4. splinteredsunrise Avatar
    splinteredsunrise

    They had a debate in the paper for months about whether it was all right to laugh at Ali G. I just think that Baron Cohen is a great performer and that will cover up all sorts of things, but he should really get a new act. He’s been doing the faux-naif thing a good ten years now, and has probably got all the mileage he can out of it.

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  5. predictably socialist worker panned this film for being homophobic ?

    Macallum:

    Why predictably? And in what sense is this a question (ie why the question mark?). You asking for confirmation?

    Me, i thought Borat was bollocks and anti-semitic (but in SUCH an ironic way) so i’m not going to check by shelling out to see it myself.

    Who else has seen it, and who agrees with either Liam or SW?

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  6. Does that mean the SWP will be picketing this film, leafletting outside or running a campaign to get cinemas to pull it?
    What activity did the SWP do around Borat at the time?
    I certainly can’t remember seeing anything comparable to what we did as ANL around Romperstomper…

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  7. Well maybe Sacha Baron Cohen is one of those self hating Jews we sometimes hear of. I’m told that his brother has been a member of the CWI group in the Israeli state.

    Getting sanctimonious about a film like this is a quick way to make yourself look ridiculous. Of course the central character is a ludirous caricature but that’s the sort of thing you get in comedies.

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  8. I’m probably more with Liam here though I haven’t yet seen the film and not being a huge fan will probably wait till the DVD. However, in general whilst I think the sort of humour of Baron Cohen can risk backfiring on the whole it is clear who he is mocking and the SW article read as sanctimonious.

    “I’m told that his brother has been a member of the CWI group” that’s not the one who’s a gig autism spectrum disorder expert is it?

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  9. ” certainly can’t remember seeing anything comparable to what we did as ANL around Romperstomper…”

    ???
    Romper stomper whilst pretty graphic and disturbing is a powerfully anti fascist film.

    I think it would have bene well worth having antifascist stalls not to condemn the film but to reinforce its point that fascism is a dead end and dissuade any Nazis who mistakenly think the film celebrates them, but instead show that fascism is meance that all sections of the working class need to fight back against.

    Was that what you mean, RobM?

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  10. No, Jason- that’s not what I mean. We picketed the film, called for boycotts etc.

    Lots of refs to it on the internet- this one is from your lot:
    http://www.fifthinternational.org/printpdf/content/romper-stomper

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  11. I think a boycott was a mistake. Actually that lot talked some sense back then!

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  12. I think may be sometimes the swp cadre could do with a stint of media studies- audiences are not mere passive receptacles but actively create meanings.

    Of course prejudice including racism and homophobia should be challenged but romper stomper was anti racist – not to say that it wasn’t good to organise anti fascist stalls outside but to call for a boycott treats audiences as simplistic.

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  13. I enjoyed Brüno a lot, as I did Borat. That man loves and is perfectly happy to brandish his willie for a laugh. The only quibble I have with you, Liam, is that I think probably quite a few of the various scenes were staged, at this point. The conversion pastors, the straight hunters, the military recruit, and the child actors’ parents are my candidates for not hardly candid camera. Not the brilliant Ron Paul scene, though, which in itself is worth the price of admission, and probably not the Dallas talk show with baby OJ, which was also excellent.

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  14. I’ve heard a few negative reviews of Bruno from friends. I saw Borat and wasn’t really impressed, especially as it is based on a disgusting racist portrayal of an entire bunch of people. Also, the “revelation” that a bunch of stupid frat boys in the south are anti-semitic is also underwhelming to say the least. The only good part was the naked wrestling which made all the pro-Borat homophobes squirm in their theatre seats.

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  15. Joseph Kisolo Avatar
    Joseph Kisolo

    The problem with all this ‘he’s clever and ironic’ stuff is that this in’t the way most people will watch the film.

    While you may be able to argue that Borat was really sending up people’s assumptions about forieners and that Bruno is sending up Homophobes, the reallity is that most people are laughing at the foriener and at the gay man.

    The socilaist worker article http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/art.php?id=18381seems like it probally gets things right – Borat feed into anti-european racism and Burno will increase matcho anti-gay bullshit.

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  16. Well Joseph I can only go by the reaction of the few hundred people – predominantly straight couples out on a Saturday night – who were in the same audience as me. There was no negative reaction to two men getting physical on screen, no groans of disgust at some of the more extreme practices suggested. My impression is that while Bruno is not someone you would suggest as a role model for a gay nephew no one had any issue with his sexuality and saw him as a comic creation to ridicule prejudices.

    For example in the scene with the pastor that I mention Bruno comes over just as a man who likes sex. The pastor as a deeply repressed and unhappy bigot. It’s also got a happy ending in which the two gay characters start a new life together with their adopted baby. That is telling the audience somthing.

    That’s my take on it and I think Jason gets it right when he says “audiences are not mere passive receptacles but actively create meanings”.

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  17. Joseph Kisolo Avatar
    Joseph Kisolo

    I’ll have to take your word for it Liam – but I don’t know if the 14 year old kids who watch it on DVD will laugh in the same way.

    On Borat, I’m more confident that the film really did key into an anti-estern European feeling. Whether or not this was how it was ment. I heard many jokes, some from friends I would have thought where smarter then that, based on Borat that were deeply rasist.

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