Showing posts with label Larry Charles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Larry Charles. Show all posts

Movie Review Dicks The Musical

Dicks The Musical (2023) 

Directed by Larry Charles 

Written by Aaron Jackson, Josh Sharp 

Starring Aaron Jackson, Josh Sharp, Nathan Lane, Megan Mullally, Megan Thee Stallion 

Release Date October 27th, 2023 

Published October 31st, 2023

Dicks The Musical is not quite as filthy as that title might imply. Don't get me wrong, the movie is uproariously filthy, but it's not filled with much full frontal male nudity. That remains one of the very few taboos that Dicks the Musical doesn't confront, at least not head on. Of all of the things that Dicks the Musical gets away with under the banner of an R-Rating, the sillier that Larry Charles and writer-actors Aaron Jackson and Josh Sharp, make the MPAA look like a completely joke. Yeah, you can show two men in an aggressive, upside down nude embrace as long as you only show their butts. It's that kind of charged silliness that drives Dicks the Musical in humiliating the Hollywood ratings board. 

Dicks the Musical centers its story on a pair of gay men, Aaron Jackson and Josh Sharp, who are playing a pair of non-gay characters, alpha male types who have a different woman every night and a six figure salary plus commissions as the top salesmen of their company. Named Craig and Trevor respectively, these two manly beasts are about to come face to face for the first time as their company, Vroomba, is combining their sales staff from two sides of the same big city. This will prove to be important as Craig and Trevor are twins, separated at birth. No, they look nothing alike, but for the purposes of this story we are asked to go along with the gag.

Discovering their brotherly bond, not because they look like, but rather because they carry to different sides of a necklace, Craig and Trevor excitedly start dreaming of reuniting their parents. To do this, they will engage in their own version of The Parent Trap with each going undercover in the home of the parent who abandoned them. For Craig, this means meeting his mother, Evelyn (Megan Mullally) for the first time. As for Trevor, he is going to meet his father, Harris (Nathan Lane) for the first time. Using the skills that made them top salesman, they believe that they can convince their parents to get back together, Parent Trap style. 

Find my full length review at Filthy.Media





Movie Review: Bruno

Bruno (2009)

Directed by Larry Charles 

Written by Sacha Baron Cohen, Anthony Hines, Dan Mazer, Jeff Schaffer

Starring Sacha Baron Cohen, Bono, Harrison Ford, Paula Abdul

Release Date July 10th, 2009

Published July 9th, 2009

If ever  a movie deserved the NC-17 rating it's Bruno, the latest prank comedy from British provocateur Sacha Baron Cohen. Best known for his character Borat, also a boundary stretching R-rated comedy, Baron Cohen's latest makes Borat look tame by comparison. 

Bruno is, according to voiceover, Austria's number one fashion guru. He sits front row at the best fashion shows and designers live for his opinion. Unfortunately, when he shows up for a fashion show dressed in a velcro suit he brings down the entire house and is blacklisted from the fashion world.

Looking for a new start Bruno moves to Los Angeles where he hopes to become a worldwide celebrity. This plot is merely a jumping off point for a lot of humor at the expense of homosexuals and really anyone unfortunate enough to wonder into Bruno's line of sight.

In targeting everyone Baron Cohen misses just about everyone. From easy targets like the homophobic Westboro Baptist Church and a Los Angeles based Psychic to one time Presidential candidate Representative Ron Paul and American Idol judge Paula Abdul, no one is safe from Bruno/Baron Cohen's onslaught of homophobic and racial humor.

It's odd but I laughed a great deal at Bruno. The sheer audacity of some of the things Baron Cohen does on screen earns your respect for his bravery and more than a few laughs. However, on reflection you realize how empty those laughs really are. Psychics and homophobes? Not exactly groundbreaking targets.

In one highly derivative moment Baron Cohen and director Larry Charles visit a church in Alabama where they claim they can turn gay people straight. The idea is that gay Bruno wishes to become straight to become a celebrity. One must wonder however if he borrowed the idea from director Charles' previous effort, the documentary Religulous where star Bill Maher took on another church with the same claim head on and in much funnier fashion.

The most awkward and seemingly unfair series of scenes involve Bruno learning to become macho by going hunting with a group of Alabama hunters. The hunters are assumed to be homophobic, mostly because they are southern not because they have gone out of their way to demonstrate it, but it is not their discomfort with gays that comes out in these scenes but rather Baron Cohen's overall creepy approach.

Baron Cohen is begging for a homophobic response from these four hunters, even going as far as stripping nude and asking to share one man's tent. I don't care how tolerant someone is, there is no proper way to respond to that. The scene is awkward, creepy and uncomfortable and if it draws a laugh it is for the audacity of Cohen and not at the expense of the unfortunate hunter.

Much has been made of Representative Ron Paul's appearance in the film. The scene set up is shocking but again it is Bruno and not Representative Paul who looks like a creep as he drops his pants in front of Mr. Paul after going desperately out of his way to make Mr. Paul uncomfortable. Would I prefer that Mr. Paul not use a homophobic slur as he does while fleeing Bruno? Yes. But I understand his frustration.

The film is by some machination is Rated-R. I must say that what I saw in the first 10 minutes of Bruno more than warranted an NC-17. Again, it doesn't matter whether you are homophobic or not, I don't think you want to witness simulated gay sex. You get just that within the first 10 to 20 minutes of Bruno.

Just because the naughty bits are censored doesn't mean what you are seeing is not pornographic. This is really pornography dressed up as a comedy. Moreover, it's Baron Cohen playing a prank on us in the audience, daring you to walk out. Trust me if you decide to see the movie and walk out after 10 minutes, you are not homophobic, you just have good taste.

I will admit, I didn't walk out. The outrageousness, the sheer audacity of what I was seeing, and often turning away from until it was off screen, was so stunning that I succumbed to the idea of what will he do next. Bruno never fails to create one scene more shocking than the next.

Is Bruno daring and provocative? Yes. It's even funny in the sense of how incredulity can often turn into laughter. But, on further review, Bruno/Baron Cohen is really just a cheap shot artist throwing random shots in all directions and missing nearly every target simply for the fact that he has no real perspective to defend.

Bruno is gay but he is an ugly stereotype of homosexuality. He confronts homophobes in a fashion that some will find admirable but doing so while essentially displaying his own homophobia defeats the satire. Trying to force people, not surprisingly southerners, into displays of homophobia is just cheap.

There is no agenda, gay or otherwise in Bruno and without a perspective to defend or put forward the result is nihilism and what's funny about that? Bruno is not pro-gay or homophobic. He is not in favor of pompous celebrity but he fails to lampoon it. Bruno is vaguely racist but shys away from exhibiting racism or satirizing it well.

I laughed at Bruno. A lot. But, upon reflection, the laughs are empty and meaningless. The comedy of discomfort often leads to this feeling of emptiness afterward. There are no ideas in Bruno, only awkwardness, discomfort and the feeling of being cheated by a prankster who pretends to be on your side, pretends you too are in on the joke when he is really just punching everyone, including the audience.

If that sounds like fun for you, so be it. It was fun for me in the moment. Not so much fun now that I think of defending what I laughed at. I laughed out of shock, incredulous at how else to react. I have never seen anything so daring onscreen before and I was hooked by it. Now, I wish I had done something better with my time and you may feel the same. That is, if you can even make it through the movie as I did.

Documentary Review Religulous

Religulous (2008) 

Directed by Larry Charles

Written by Documentary

Starring Bill Maher

Release Date October 1st, 2008 

Published October 1st, 2008

I struggled for a very long time with atheism. There was a sort of emptiness to not having faith in something bigger. Confronting the world knowing there was no plan, no creator who could set things right if things went horrible was a frightening concept. It was only in the wake of 9/11 that I realized the whole god thing didn't make sense for me.

Bill Maher's new documentary Religulous is the perfect movie for me because it affirmed everything I have ever believed about organized religion. Part polemic, part comedy, all passion, Religulous will anger many and convert more.

The premise is not Bill Maher trying to convince you to give up your faith. Rather, he is curious about certainty. How and why can anyone be so certain about something that cannot be proven. A number of random Americans, some at a truck stop church in a converted truck trailer, then across the US and to Israel and Palestine give Maher reasons why they believe. This however, only sets Maher off further.

The question turns on the person answering it however. How can it be faith if you feel the need to defend what you believe with proof. Maher saves his biggest satirical bombs for a trio of easy targets. Arkansas is the home of the Creation Museum, a place where people can see paintings and sculptures of people in Jesus's day and age riding dinosaurs, which proves not the coexistence of Jesus and dinosaurs, but rather, Hanna and Barbara.

Then there is the Gay No More organization where Maher encounters a very confused man who believes he is former gay thanks to Jesus. In a conversation that last maybe five minutes the man contradicts himself on the issue of being born gay. Then Maher travels to a Christian theme park where Maher is the one nearly knocked off his high horse. Ever so briefly Maher is confronted by someone, an actor playing Jesus, who has a good sound reasoning for his belief buried inside a complex metaphor.

While Religulous is a grenade throwing polemic against organized religion, and quite a powerful one when it wants to be, it's also very funny. Watching Maher with his mother confronting when they began to drift from the church is revealing and sweet. Then there is Maher's interactions in the Vatican where he encounters a pair of priests who defy conventions and work for the Vatican.

One of these wonderful old priests is the Vatican's own science expert who blows up the idea of a creation museum. Even the Vatican thinks that's crazy. The other knocks his own church for its excesses and simply urges people to believe regardless of where or why. This gregarious gentlemen is no doubt a favorite of Maher's, interviewed right outside the Vatican, he laughs off nearly all of the hardcore believers in his urging toward a faith that doesn't require proof.

The final thesis of Religulous turns on the dangers and excesses of organized religion. It's about the need to check the beliefs of our leaders before we elect them. How religious beliefs can be a danger to the world when the powerful mix with the faithful. President Bush is an evangelical christian who believes the world will end in his lifetime. How do you figure that belief plays into his views on the environment? Or our current economic crisis? If you don't believe there is a future beyond your lifetime, what do you care if the thieves are robbing the temple? 

When Congress opens a session with a prayer, how many of those Senators are praying to a god they believe will return in their lifetime?

Can you trust a politician who tells you they can leave their faith at the door? How can you tell you at every turn how much their faith shapes what they believe? The next time a politician tells you they believe in the state of Israel shouldn't you ask them if they believe it is because the Jewish people deserve a homeland or because they believe that Israel is where Jesus will return and the Jews need to be there to be converted or die when he comes back?

These issues of the faith of our political leaders are dangerous to us all and need to be checked. Somehow it has become taboo to question people about faith. Thus, who better than the former host of Politically Incorrect to force the question.


Will Religulous give some people the urge to abandon their faith? Maybe. But if you are truly a person of faith nothing should shake that. The real, relative importance of Religion is to ask you to be smarter about faith and the faithful. There are inherent dangers in being blindly certain of just about anything. Blind certainty, blind faith, these are as dangerous to all as they are comforting to some. Bill Maher shines a light on these dangers and hopes that satire is the best way to illuminate them.

For those who think Maher is simply being mocking and self-serving , the comedian states clearly that he is not certain there is no god. Rather, he states plainly, he just doesn't know. He has a lot of questions and the people who try to answer them often only make things worse.

Movie Review Megalopolis

 Megalopolis  Directed by Francis Ford Coppola  Written by Francis Ford Coppola  Starring Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel, Giancarlo Esposito...