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Sunday, 26 November 2006

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» Backlash on Borat? from What About Clients?
From from Professor Peter Black, suggesting a growing different take on the film, at his Freedom to Differ, in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, here is "Is the tide turning on Borat?" Peter, by the way, hosts Blawg Review #85, out tomorrow.... [Read More]

» Backlash on Borat? from What About Clients?
From Professor Peter Black, suggesting a growing different take on the film, at his Freedom to Differ, in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, see "Is the tide turning on Borat?" Peter hosts Blawg Review #85, out tomorrow. Freedom to Differ "speaks freely... [Read More]

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Stephen

Come on, Borat is fucking funny. Why can't we laugh at Americans?

Matt Hickey

I saw the Borat movie earlier this week. Whilst moments of it had me howling with laughter, for the most part these were not the scenes which, I suspect, were supposed to make some form of social comment on America and Americans.

As the film progressed I found myself more and more uncomfortable with the unecessary cruelty of misleading the unwitting participants, some of whom (the Georgian Dinner guests for example) showed incredibly good grace and poise when met with such awkward situaions. (I don't want to be more specific for fear of spoiling the movie for others.)

On the whole I thought Borat falied to live up to its potential and I think a mind a as sharp as Sacha Baron Cohen's should have known that would be the case.

Laughing at cultural pecadillos CAN be funny - laughing at suckers who've been duped into signing releases and then editing the footage to show them in their poorest light is a form of intellectual bullying in my view.

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  • Peter Black
    Lawyer, lecturer, blogger, geek and obsessive compulsive Twitterer

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    This blog speaks freely about law, politics and the internet. While the focus is on Australia, developments in other nations around the world are considered as well.
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    The title of this blog is inspired by the Opinion of the US Supreme Court in Board of Education v Barnette 319 US 624 (1943): "But freedom to differ is not limited to things that do not matter much. That would be a mere shadow of freedom. The test of its substance is the right to differ as to things that touch the heart of the existing order."

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