'Bruno' review

Sacha Baron Cohen again does anything for a laugh—even if it means missing the point

By Matt Pais

Metromix
July 9, 2009

 
Critic's Rating:
3

'Bruno' review
Sacha Baron Cohen (Credit: Frank Ockenfels/Universal)
Photos:
Sacha Baron Cohen Sacha Baron Cohen Sacha Baron Cohen Sacha Baron Cohen
Brüno
Running time:
82 minutes
Rated:
R
Cast:
Sacha Baron Cohen -
Brüno
Gustaf Hammarsten -
Lutz
Paula Abdul -
Herself
Harrison Ford -
Himself
Bono -
Himself
See full cast
Director:
Larry Charles
Genre:
Comedy
Official Movie Web Site:
http://www.meinspace.com/bruno
Movie Trailer:
Overall User Rating:
3 1/2 (5 ratings)
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While trying to become an American celebrity, faux Austrian TV personality Brüno (Sacha Baron Cohen) flaunts his homosexuality in the most ostentatious ways possible, from enduring on-camera anal bleaching to piloting a TV show featuring a flopping, talking penis. (Note: This is the first Metromix review to include the terms “anal bleaching” and “flopping penis.”) The gags also involve Brüno meeting with a “gay converter” in Alabama, trading an iPod for an African baby, trying to bring peace to the Middle East and pointlessly chasing a group that declares, “God Hates Fags.”

The buzz: Cohen’s character from “Da Ali G Show” has had his share of recent headlines, between introducing his crotch to Eminem at the MTV Movie Awards and cutting a scene with LaToya Jackson out of "Brüno" in the wake of Michael Jackson’s death. As the film uses a blend of documentary and scripted sketches to skewer gay stereotypes, the question is if "Brüno" can possibly seem as fresh, daring and real after 2006’s hysterical “Borat,” which made Cohen a more widely recognizable star.

The verdict: A funny, fearlessly absurd comedy but a shaky satire, “Brüno” often gets off-topic, confusing the message—those prejudiced against gays see all homosexual behavior as this overt—with subjects muddled by race, religion and celebrity-obsessed culture. The film’s bravery is also dulled by choosing such easy targets and by skepticism over its authenticity (a clearly scripted early scene with Paula Abdul casts doubt over much that follows). Where Borat’s naiveté cleverly exposed ignorance, the imposing “Brüno” becomes redundant and obvious in showing just how alarmed people are by deliberately confrontational behavior. You don’t have to be as anti-gay as the Arkansas mixed martial arts fans onscreen to think two guys making out in the ring seems out of place, and not much of a step forward toward tolerance.

Did you know?
Brüno informs a terrorist leader in Lebanon that he thinks Osama Bin Laden looks like a “dirty wizard” or a “homeless Santa.” At last, someone’s initiating a conversation that can put an end to all this international negativity.

Video: See what opening night moviegoers say about "Brüno"

Video: Watch Matt's review of "Bruno"

What other people are saying...

No-pic-chick

KGpanda from mililani - July 18, 2009 at 10:27 PM

I thought it was hilarious! I can see how it was offensive to some people, but if you see this movie just take everything with a grain of salt, tha...

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kramer from CWE - St. Louis - July 15, 2009 at 9:00 PM

I saw "Bruno" on opening night, and while I was familiar with the character, I really had no idea what I was getting into when I sat down for the h...

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No-pic-chick

Faithgrace from cincinnati - July 15, 2009 at 4:12 PM

Bruno was the most disgusting piece of crap that I have ever seen disguised as a movie. This guy touched on every sensitive issue in our society t...

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Leraindrops from Auburn GA - July 13, 2009 at 9:57 AM

From what I heard, it was short from being XX rated with black squares. Cultural differences had different reactions.

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