The Dictator

Film

Comedy

Sacha Baron Cohen, center, in The Dictator

Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5
Rate this  

Time Out says

Fri May 11 2012

It’s a safe bet that ‘The Dictator’ will be 2012’s only feature presented ‘in loving memory of Kim Jong Il’. This latest outrage from Sacha Baron Cohen and director Larry Charles continues the template set down in ‘Borat’ and ‘Brüno’, offering the spectacle of an outlandishly foreign, preposterously unreconstructed ego monster set loose on American soil. Despite its timeliness – North African despots are so hot right now – ‘The Dictator’ has far less satirical bite than its predecessors and is flimsier as filmmaking. But it’s funny as hell.

Admiral General Aladeen (Baron Cohen), ‘beloved oppressor’ since childhood of fictional rogue state Wadiya, enjoys a trigger-happy life of inane luxury and whimsical terror. A run-in with weapons inspectors necessitates a visit to the UN in New York, where things swiftly go from ‘Crocodile Dundee’ to ‘After Hours’: Aladeen finds himself adrift in Brooklyn, avoiding dissident diners in Little Wadiya and working at a vegan feminist cooperative run by adorably strident Zoey (Anna Faris). There’s also some business with a former underling (Jason Mantzoukas) and a nefarious rival (Ben Kingsley, underused) in the run-up to the signing of a new democratic mandate for Wadiya.

There’s a lightweight quality to ‘The Dictator’ compared to its predecessors. The fact that Aladeen’s delusions of grandeur aren’t quite delusions – he does run a country, after all – makes him less compelling than Ali G, Borat or Brüno, while the film’s other characters and plotting are perfunctory. Most regrettable is the loss of the candid-camera interactions with real-life stooges that allowed ‘Borat’ and especially ‘Brüno’ to take a genuinely sharp satirical edge to American culture; nor is there any substantial engagement with the mechanics of actual oppression. As some lame shtick with Aladeen’s imbecilic double makes clear, ‘The Great Dictator’ this ain’t – although one wittily subversive speech towards the end is pleasingly barbed.

Still, if a comedy is meant to make you laugh, mission accomplished. As a series of wonderfully grotesque set-pieces, ‘The Dictator’ delivers, from the Munich massacre à la Wii and a helicopter ride from hell to hipster blowback and genital slapstick. Baron Cohen’s talents as a clown find their the ideal vehicle in this onslaught of sheer tastelessness – a cluster-bomb of comic coups enveloping neo-cons and fem-lit, torture and amniotic fluid, linguistics and architecture, wanking and severed heads. And there is room for one touching moment: when Aladeen sees Zoey haranguing a cop, her finger in his face, her features a mask of indignant self-regard, he realises this might just be the girl for him.

Critics' choice
66

Comments

Add +

Release details

UK release:

Fri May 18 2012

Duration:

83 mins

Cast and crew

Director:

Larry Charles

Cast:

Sacha Baron Cohen, Anna Faris, Ben Kingsley

Share your thoughts
  1. * mandatory fields

Comments & ratings

Rated as: 3/5 (51 ratings)
  • Really boring and cringe worthy.

    Anna L. Mon May 21 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
    Report
  • Comedy has died.

    Ace of Spades Mon May 21 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
    Report
  • If you get dragged in to watch this film by your friends don't forget to take your iphone so's you have something to while away the time.

    Lisa in Harlow Mon May 21 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
    Report
  • Totally crap waste of time. A movie for racists and losers.

    Mayfair Tom Mon May 21 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
    Report
  • Great movie. I'd also like to add that sadly, some commenters on this page do not know what "irony", "sarcasm" and "satire" mean. Do you not understand that Cohen is making fun of racists and ridiculing racial prejudice..?

    Sebastian Mon May 21 2012
    Rated as: 5/5
    Report
  • Sorry - forgotten to rate

    Tatty Mon May 21 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
    Report
  • Really disappointing

    Tatty Mon May 21 2012
    Report
  • Whilst a bit silly at times its no holds barred pure comedic genius and an interesting commentary on east west divide. Absolutely hilarious. How anyone can not find this movie funny in parts I really don't understand

    Bob Mon May 21 2012
    Rated as: 5/5
    Report
  • It's as funny as vomit.

    James Mon May 21 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
    Report
  • Yet another awful TIME OUT review where I cannot for the life of me wonder where the critics get their opinions from. This time it's awarding a film too much credit. Whilst I loved Borat and Bruno, this film is a big let down. The jokes are forced, the humour sometimes hilarious but often just so stupid and base that you almost wince in embarrassment. It's time to move on to other projects I think for Cohen - the trailer promised something a lot more. Unfortunately the film itself was much worse

    Justin Berkovi Mon May 21 2012
    Rated as: 2/5
    Report
  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
  6. 6
  7. 7
  • Hotwise
  • Cool brands
  • Star