Friday, March 28, 2014

Tropic Thunder--for an out-of-box comedy experience!


My suggestion for a film to watch is Tropic Thunder.


The plot centers around a group of spoiled actors who are lost in the jungle while making a war movie. Ben Stiller plays Tugg Speedman, an almost washed up hero who earlier failed in his bid to win an Oscar while portraying Simple Jack, a character with an intellectual disability. Speedman’s portrayal of Simple Jack is featured as a movie within a movie. There were even fake websites and a “mockumentary”--Rain of Madness (which parodied the documentary Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse) for this movie, which was loosely based on the filming of Apocalypse Now, and how difficult the filming was for Francis Ford Coppola in 1979. 

The word “retard” is used 16 times in this movie. 


Also in the movie: 

  • Mocking references to gay and fat people. 
  • One character portrayed as a white man who has darkened his skin to play a black man. A black character criticizes him several times for impersonating a black man. 
  • Extensive use of vulgar humor and profanity. 
  • Many jokes about the shallowness, self-involvement and ignorance of actors and Hollywood executives in general.

I thought the film was hilarious, but I am sure many, many people might not like the film.


I was inspired to choose this movie after I saw an article on the news this week about people being outraged over Nick Cannon wearing white-face.


Nick Cannon on CBS


Seriously?!?!?


In the 1800s, play authors were ridiculing the government and the justice system, making fun of women and children being assaulted and potentially raped, and laughing at people dying, but there are still people in society today who make a big deal out of comedy and theater. Shakespeare performed plays dressed as women because females were not allowed on stage, and yet many people still criticize and alienate cross-dressers. How does that happen, when a society seems too go backward instead of progressing forward?


I think the lines are blurred as far as comedy and what is real for people. In today’s society, we mock people for everything. Our motto in comedy is pretty much ‘anything goes’, but there are always those 'political correctness' nazis who say, “The nerve of you people!” Needless to say, hypocrisy runs rampant in modern culture, and is widely acceptable, but a good comedy, created just to make people laugh is horrible! (insert sarcasm here).


Tropic Thunder breaks every ‘politically correct’ rule known in our culture, and I think this is an interesting movie to analyze for our class, because it gives us a hint of how viewing audiences may have felt during the eras many of our class plays were written.


I enjoy stepping out of my box, and I feel we have done that several times in this class. Keeping with the spirit of out-of-box experiences, I think this movie has all the awkwardness and uncomfortableness in the name of comedy that we can stand, and that many plays we have studied exemplified at the time they were performed.


My only concern is, this movie is quite vulgar. I wouldn’t want to offend anyone.

9 comments:

  1. I love this movie! I'd actually considered suggesting this movie. I understand your concerns with the offensive ways some things are addressed in this movie, but I think it's a ridiculous and over the top amount of offensiveness that makes the movie so great. It's parody stacked on top of parody stacked on top of parody and its basically making fun of itself and Hollywood in general.
    As far as connecting it back to the text, I actually referenced this movie when were were discussing (I think) the Carnival plays in one of the first classes of the semester. It's the beyond reality elements that make this movie funny. Nothing in the movie is too realistic, so it makes it easier for the audience to laugh at what's going on... even if it is pretty offensive.

    Of course, some of my favorite stuff is comedy that says things I should be offended by, but it's presented in a way that is obviously making fun of people and situations that are offensive...which is probably why I'm a fan of Bo Burnham's...

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  2. I like you choice for our little movie night in class. I believe that this could a great topic of discussion for us. When you started talking about how offensive it is, I thought of Louis CK. He said offending someone is a healthy thing. It forces people to think and have a discussion.

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    1. I love Louis CK and his dry style of humor, and I agree with your point about how it can be healthy to offend someone, but at the same time I always fear hurting people’s feeling to the point of traumatizing them. I would hate to be the cause of a horrible memory for another individual.

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  3. Robert Downey Jr. and Tom Cruise made this movie great for me. I think that we could discuss why such vulgar actions and language are so funny today and why some may have a problem with it.

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    1. I agree. Some people get very angry, and although it concerns me to offend people, at the same time, I laugh at people who get angry at comedy all the time. The juxtaposition of comedy and offense would definitely be an interesting topic to explore in our class.

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  4. I think this film would provide us with the ammunition to have a good discussion of how a plot can drive a comedy. Having never seen the movie, I can clearly see that the situation of some pampered actors finding themselves so far out of place so as to be in a combat zone would make for calamity, which in the context of a movie, is a sure-fire way of eliciting laughter. I think this film hits the target for the purposes of providing discussion and analysis material, and it's something I would look forward to seeing.

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  5. Could be my bias talking, but I think this movie is an absolute gem! It's definitely insulting, but to such a broad degree that there isn't one specific target, so (in theory) it should neutralize any ill-will that people might feel towards it. I like your example about cross-dressing. It fits the change-of-character theme that RDJ portrays in Tropic Thunder, and also relates back to Lysistrata (the fact that all the women were likely played by men).

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  6. Agreed Whitney. Sometimes I wonder why people can’t just laugh and move on. The phrase, ‘misery loves company’, comes to my mind often when reading news stories.

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