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Tropic Thunder (2008)
Release Date:
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
MPAA Rating:
R
Rating Reason:
For pervasive language including sexual references, violent content and drug material
Genre:
Comedy
Starring:
Ben Stiller, Jack Black, Robert Downey Jr., Nick Nolte, Brandon Jackson, Steve Coogan, Danny McBride, Bill Hader, Jay Baruchel, Matt Levin, Andrea De Oliveira, Reggie Lee, Matthew McConaughey, Tom Cruise
Written By:
Ben Stiller, Etan Cohen, Justin Theroux
Director:
Ben Stiller
Official Site:
Synopsis:
Ben Stiller says "Tropic Thunder" is a "a comedy about five actors who go on location and find themselves relying on their boot camp experiences when they get stuck in a real war-like situation." Black will play Jeff "Fats" Portnoy, an overweight gross-out comedian, who's forced to kick his drug addiction while filming on location in the jungle.
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Tropic Thunder (2008) | Review
When The Tongue Offends The Cheek
efrain gomez
Be aware though, it certainly earns its R rating. The film features gratuitously violent (yet comical?) moments involving severed limbs, heroin addiction, and an ocean of f-bombs. And aside from that, the movie is bound to offend with its comedic attacks on almost every minority, including racial groups and those Hollywood elite circles of agents, producers, and famous actors. Now let me take a moment to mention the standout performance of Robert Downey, Jr. (who else?) as the White dude playing a Black dude, which no doubt will raise a few eyebrows. I've always admired his acting ability, particularly his recent display of talent in films like Zodiac and Iron Man. In Tropic Thunder, he plays Kirk Lazarus, a lily-white, multi-Oscar-winning Australian actor so dedicated to his craft that he's literally lost his identity in the characters he plays. Although Lazarus (an obvious spoof on real-life actor Russell Crowe) is a definite crowd-pleasing, over-the-top character, Downey, Jr. seems to have found a way to infuse a real, albeit simplistic, inner conflict. Lazarus is cast as a Black man in the movie (within the movie), which of course is a ludicrous idea that results in a ton of laughs that ring truth about the ridiculosity of Hollywood. It makes it worse, or funnier, that an actual black character, played by Brandon T. Jackson (Roll Bounce) is cast in the movie, sort of like the "token Black guy," losing the lead to Lazarus. This may seem offensive on the surface, but it is approachable commentary on media-race relations in Hollywood masked in the jokes. Perhaps he doesn't always know when to stop, and he ventures far into the awkward, vulgar, and dumb, but Stiller inserts commentary amidst the potty humor and profanity. As in Zoolander, Stiller employs his brand of "clever stupidity" in Tropic Thunder, transcending simple spoof into sizzling satire that speaks a little from a Hollywood insider's perspective. Full of tongue-in-cheek over-the-topness, Tropic Thunder aims to please while sending a small nugget of a message having something to do with being comfortable in your own skin, and achieving things you never thought possible through perseverance, blah, blah, blah. Ah, who am I kidding? The message might just as well be: Hollywood cares only about making money and exploiting the suffering of the few while hopefully anesthetizing you with multisensory entertainment. In that sense, Tropic Thunder becomes a indulgent display of Hollywood irony, biting the hand that feeds it. Oh, but how funny and action-packed is that irony indeed Continue: 1 2 Copyright © 2008 Hollywood Jesus. All rights reserved.
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