Rating:
***/*****, or 6/10
Sacha
Baron Cohen mindlessly repeats his success of Borat by
appropriating the same type of narrative set-up to his other infamous
character, the excessively explicitly gay German fashion designer
Brüno.
First introducing Brüno
in his natural environment at a fashion show turned awry, he's taken
out of his element when banned from the fashion industry, after which
his lover leaves him and he travels to America to become famous once
more, insulting most conceivable minorities in the process in a
series of loosely attached sketches. Whereas this approach led to
great results in Borat,
in the case of Brüno
it leads to a distinct feeling of 'been there, done that'. What's
more, the cheap gay jokes simply are not as original or as outrageous
as Borat's repertoire and many miss their mark. However, there's
still plenty to enjoy for at least one decent watch, including Brüno
adopting a coloured baby he names O.J., visiting a swinger club to
take advise on how to become straight and interviewing parents all
too eager to let their child break through in show business about a
role for their kids in a scene involving heavy antiquated machinery
and Nazi uniforms. Filled with every thinkable cliché
involving homosexuals, a lot of them simply cringy worthy, gay people
had best ignore this flick.
Starring:
Sacha Baron Cohen, Gustaf Hammarsten, Clifford Baňagale
Directed
by Larry Charles
USA:
Universal Pictures, 2009
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