Sacha Baron Cohen
Borat 2 sheds portions of the subtlety seen in the first film in a necessary plea to fully understand the harm of our current administration.
The Trial of the Chicago 7 has the potential to become a bona-fide crowdpleaser that will resonate with its target demographic.
Follow-up film to the 2006 comedy centering on the real-life adventures of a fictional Kazakh television journalist named Borat.
The film is based on the infamous 1969 trial of seven defendants charged by the federal government with conspiracy and more.
Who is America? doesn’t know if it wants to remain apolitical, embarrass right-wing figures, or take down the president – and its lack of focus is its downfall.
It’s no secret that Sacha Baron Cohen makes comedies that age badly, no matter how well-regarded they are upon their release. His reputation as a satirist with his finger on the pulse of contemporary societal prejudices ensures that days and weeks after initial release they become regarded as documents of America’s unforgivable past. With Grimsby, Cohen makes his first British movie in fourteen years, after his execrable debut Ali G In Da House – and it is the first time his brand of social satire feels not just outdated, but tired prior to release.