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6.27.2008

Why, Adam Sandler, Why?


Last night I was intending to see this really cool documentary at the Pacific Film Archive called The Decline of Western Civilization (with the director present) about Punk in the early 80's, but it was sold out. So after some discussion, we headed over to pay 10 bucks for Adam Sandler's new movie about an Israeli hair dresser.
I'll admit, it was exactly what I expected it to be. It was incredibly stupid with some funny slapstick and we were the only ones in the theater laughing at the Israeli jokes. But one thing that I didn't expect to see (although I guess I should have) was all the horrendous stereotyping that went on throughout the film. I didn't like constant use of the word feygele to make fun of hair dressers (yet a fair criticism of the macho attitude of Israeli society), and the terrible way that Palestinians were portrayed. Jack Shaheen is having a field day with this movie.
At the beginning there was a funny bit of dialogue that showed that the makers of the movie weren't total Islamophobic idiots. As Zohan, the superhuman Israeli counter-terrorism commando, has a fight scene with Hamas terrorists, in between punches in kicks they begin to argue about the conflict saying, "you know, its not so cut and dry, we've been here for a long time" "Right, and there were never any Jews in the Middle East." After hearing that exchange I had false hopes that the movie would continue with witty, intelligent humor instead of Sandler's usual poo poo jokes, but I was wrong. I should have remembered that movies like this are funny for the first ten minutes in order to hook you, and then they just get stupid.
They started blurring the lines between Arab and Palestinian, at some points given them Saudi head coverings, confusing the Lebanese flag with the Palestinian flag, and persisting the Arab stereotypes that have been going on since the beginning of Hollywood. The writers must have done their homework. I can just see them watching Lawrence of Arabia, taking notes, and saying, "Yeah, thats offensive and inaccurate, let's add that to the storyboard." Having the evil Palestinian leader surrounded by a harem of belly dancers and making the Arabs so incompetent that they couldn't figure out how to make a bomb, forcing them to call the Hizbollah hotline, must have been taken straight out of Arabs in American Media 101.
I understand that stereotypes are funny and that they are an easy way to introduce a character in a short period of time, but we shouldn't be trying to persist those stereotypes. It is movies like these that lead to the experience that I had in the airport in Detroit. Producers should start focusing less on "how can we make the most money with the least amount of thought" and more on "how can we make a great movie that will be funny for a mainstream audience."
Even comedic movies that focus on stereotypes can be made intelligent. Take Borat, for example. It was a smart film because they used stereotypes to poke fun at the kind of people who use and believe these stereotypes. So although there were parts of the movie that seemed anti-semitic, in reality they were making fun of anti-semites and may have even opened peoples consciousness to antisemitism. We need more Sacha Baron Cohen films.

7 comments:

JBW said...

First off, congrads on your becoming a member of the JewSchool blogging community.....


And for my blog response: you say that Borat was a smart film that made fun of anti-Semites. I'd agree with that, but Zohan technically makes fun of stereotypes as well, just in a less clever, more stupid way. I'm sure we both find Borat funny (I've seen it way too many times to count), and understand how he uses 'real' situations to to make statements about society, but to someone without background in Middle East culture and politics (or who is just plain ignorant) could also get the wrong picture. Ex: gypsies, 'Jew-horns,' other countries as primitive and barbaric (execution, torture), gay issues (rubber fist), womens' rights (societal and sexual), AIDS and consumerism to name a few. Pick your poison.

Eric Salitsky said...

The difference, I think, is that Borat was made with the intention that their audience would get that its poking fun at the stereotypers and not the stereotypes themselves. He wasn't making fun of Jews, he was making fun of Jew-haters.
True, it can be taken the wrong way by people unversed in these issues, but that is unavoidable. At least in its essence, it was meant as a smart movie.
Zohan, on the other hand, didn't reach that deeper level. It wasn't making fun of the Islamophobia of America (who make fun of Arabs), is was actually making fun of Arabs.

JBW said...

I mean, it's Adam Sandler. Remember 'Eight Crazy Nights'? What a piece of garbage. To think that he can represent all of Judaism as one of the sole, famous Jewish actors is ludicrous. However, until Sacha Baron Cohen can make movies with jokes that the majority of ignorant American can understand, that's what we're stuck with. And that's a sad fact because many people are probably more interested in seeing a movie than reading a paper. Entertainment can be a powerful medium, but it can also be a powerfully dangerous one if it's used to perpetuate conflict and stereotypes (even in joke form).

Eric Salitsky said...

Amen my sister

Anonymous said...

Adam Sandler's movies are enjoyable as long as he stays with with he's good best at: casual comedies

B.BarNavi said...

You think their treatment of Arabs was bad? Just check out how they treat Israelis. I don't think they like being portrayed as hummus-obsessed electronics hucksters perpetually behind the times in pop culture.

Truth be told, this movie tries to reach towards both sides of the aisle, at least when it comes to casting. One of the hairdressers was the lovely Palestinian comedienne Masoon Zayid, though they could have given her more lines than an Arabic cuss word.

Oh well. Those looking for anti-Arabisms will find plenty in this movie, as well as those who are looking for anti-Israelisms. Can't we just call a bad movie a bad movie?

Eric Salitsky said...

Agreed. I didn't walk into that movie expecting intellectual stimulation or progressive politics.
I guess I'm just disappointed that there was so much hype within the Jewish community that Adam Sandler was going to be making fun of Israelis (which he did a good job of, they were funny and insulting in a chummy sort of way) but it wasn't true for the other side, in my opinion. I just don't think the anti-Arabisms were in good taste. It could also just be that I'm too sensitive to those kind of jokes because they easily drift into Islamophobia.

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