Bruno draws mixed reviews from critics

Sacha Baron Cohen’s Bruno (in theaters today) has received mixed reactions from critics.
The controversial comedy — which features Cohen as a flamboyant Austrian fashion designer — has been deemed everything from “mean-spirited” to “brilliant.”
“Assuming outlandish guises, gulling the gullible and piling on the transgressive jokes, including plenty of gay-panic-inducing antics, is Sacha Baron Cohen’s shtick,” writes James Verniere in the Boston Herald. “Well, the shtick is getting a bit short, already.
“The result, directed once again by Larry Charles and co-scripted by Cohen, is like an Austin Powers movie without the characters, plot or story line. That’ll be 10 bucks, sucker,” continues the Herald critic.
Adds CNN: “Perhaps inspired by another Cohen creation, Ali G, he sets out to make a celebrity interview show — but sadly, the only dupes ignorant enough to participate are American Idol judges and presidential candidates [Ron Paul is inadvertently cast in a sex tape].”
The New York Times calls Cohen a “brilliant slapstick artist and a master of voices — Bruno’s mock-German and scrambled American idioms are in some ways even more crazily spot-on than Borat’s gibberish.”
But the paper isn’t won over by the movie.
“In spite of Mr. Baron Cohen’s…high-level skills and keen low-comic instincts, Bruno is a lazy piece of work that panders more than it provokes,” writes critic A.O. Scott.
The The Hollywood Reporter calls Cohen’s ambushes “too often…mean-spirited.
“We sense, as we never did with Borat, the comic behind the character. Especially when his accent keeps changing — from an unconvincing Austrian to his own British and even to a whisper of Borat himself,” it writes.
But Entertainment Weekly grades the film “A-” and says it’s “funnier than Borat.”
“The entire film is in seriously questionable taste, and there will, of course, be debates about what’s staged and what’s not. Those looking for purity in satire should stay away. Yet there’s a vision at work in Bruno — the movie is a toxic dart aimed at the spangly new heart of American hypocrisy: our fake-tolerant, fake-charitable, fake-liberated-yet-still madly-closeted fame culture. Bruno ends on a note of scandalously funny out-and-proud triumph.”
Variety bets the flick will open to high box office figures, calling it “undeniably funny, outrageous and boundary-pushing.”
But the controversial content will turn off some moviegoers, the magazine points out.
“There is also a pronounced nasty streak to the innumerable provocations staged by the title character that curdles the laughs and wears out the … Austrian fashionista’s welcome within the picture’s brief 82-minute running time,” Variety wrote.
Source, Bauer-Griffin





July 11th, 2009 at 8:08 am
All I have to say is, I am sick of the promoting of this movie. There is a picture of this on every picture, covering the pictures on this web site, and others too. I hate that. I don’t get the appeal & I will be glad when the ad campaign is over.
July 12th, 2009 at 9:21 am
+1 for post above. The advertising on this website is getting to the point where I may have to go elsewhere for my entertainment fix. Hope you are listening Joslyn.
July 13th, 2009 at 2:11 am
You people take yourselves way too seriously and do not know what the definition of comedy is. This movie is funny.
The people who didn’t like it was because they have NO SENSE OF HUMOR. Having a sense of humor entails being able to laugh at the world and it’s current events (that includes laughing at yourself for you are either seeing the world through Bruno’s eyes or the homophobes). Laughing at serious, touchy matters is a way of not only bringing some “relief” to a tense situation but can also broaden one’s point of view and bring tolerance and peace to a situation, even only for a moment. We have to chose to live and let live and laugh at all the crazy stuff in our beautiful planet if we don’t understand it. It disarms the threat or nervousness we feel towards something “foreign” or that which doesn’t sit quite right with us and brings a bit of lightness to our discomfort, if we allow ourselves to see how absurd our world can be.
You probably could find someone who teaches the value of laughter and comedy. You might just want to enroll–I think there is a whole lot of life passing you by while it’s eating you alive…
Good luck!
July 13th, 2009 at 12:34 pm
I won’t see this movie because I am already sick of it – I understand the need to promote a film, but I don’t appreciate it being shoved down my throat. Borat was funny and all, and of course it depends on what kind of comedy you enjoy, but this doesn’t look appealing to me at all.