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Borat spoof film banned in Russia
BBC ^
| 11/09/2006
Posted on 11/08/2006 8:15:32 PM PST by HarmlessLovableFuzzball
Russia has banned the hit comedy film, Borat, which has been accused of poking fun at Moscow's neighbour and close ally Kazakhstan.
The film stars British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen as a spoof reporter on a trip to the US.
A senior official at Russia's culture ministry has told the BBC it will not provide a distribution licence.
The film has described as a "mockumentary" which follows Mr Cohen's travel across the US.
On the way, he has a series of real life encounters with unsuspecting Americans in which he makes the most outrageous, sexist, racist, anti-Semitic and homophobic comments.
'Not amused'
It has proved to be a big hit in the US and Europe, where it opened last weekend.
Some reviewers have described it as "hysterical" and "the funniest film of the year".
But there are others, not least the government of Kazakhstan who say it is deeply offensive.
One Kazakh diplomat says that the depiction of his country as violent, primitive and oppressive bears no resemblance to reality.
And it seems the Russian authorities are also not amused.
A culture ministry official in Moscow told the BBC it had refused to issue a distribution licence because the film could potentially humiliate different ethnic groups and religions.
The official would not give any further details, except to say the distributors had the right to appeal against the government's decision.
TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: borat; kazakhstan; nyet; russia; truthhurts
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Comment #21 Removed by Moderator
Comment #22 Removed by Moderator
To: Skog
It had four full frontal male nudity that was not needed as well.
It will be all over Russia on DVD.
23
posted on
11/09/2006 12:08:03 AM PST
by
A CA Guy
(God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
Comment #24 Removed by Moderator
To: Skog
I think Russians will laugh their butts off watching the DVD.
25
posted on
11/09/2006 12:14:55 AM PST
by
A CA Guy
(God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
Comment #26 Removed by Moderator
To: struwwelpeter
When I was in a village in Siberia, they would take a dump in the outhouse, but place the used TP in a bucket by the bench to be burned. Unusual for an outhouse, but that is standard practice in places where the sewage disposal system won't handle TP. Whenever I visit the Greek islands there is often a covered bucket by the toilet for the used paper, even in very expensive hotels.
27
posted on
11/09/2006 12:33:09 AM PST
by
FreedomCalls
(It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
To: HarmlessLovableFuzzball
Guess it's because of my age. What I have seen of Borat I did not think was even slightly funny.
28
posted on
11/09/2006 12:38:37 AM PST
by
Dustbunny
(The BIBLE - Basic Instructions Before Leaving Earth)
To: struwwelpeter
When I was in a village in Siberia, they would take a dump in the outhouse, but place the used TP in a bucket by the bench to be burned. Now THAT takes getting used to.
This is a Chinese practice as well - at least in private homes. Not in Hong Kong. In China proper. Is it disgusting? Sure. But as long as you stay in hotels, you don't have to put up with it.
To: struwwelpeter
When I was in a village in Siberia, they would take a dump in the outhouse, but place the used TP in a bucket by the bench to be burned.In Brasil, there were some women, and I mean beautiful women, and I won't go into detail further, who throw the used TP in the garbage bucket and blow their noses in the sink (not using paper.)
Gave me the shakes and still does to this day.
30
posted on
11/09/2006 2:10:07 AM PST
by
Caipirabob
(Communists... Socialists... Democrats...Traitors... Who can tell the difference?)
To: struwwelpeter
When I was in a village in Siberia, they would take a dump in the outhouse, but place the used TP in a bucket by the bench to be burned.
Now THAT takes getting used to.
I have never seen that in all of my trips to Russia. However, I have to admit the smell in some of the public restrooms would knock an elephant off his feet. Once in Volgograd, I went in a pay restroom, which was sparkling clean, but the smell was so overpowering I spent 10 minutes catching my breath after leaving the room.
31
posted on
11/09/2006 5:09:56 AM PST
by
GarySpFc
(Jesus on Immigration, John 10:1)
To: HarmlessLovableFuzzball
Kazakhs speak both Kazakh and Russian.
To: GSlob
OTOH, there's a reason the Russians called the MiG-25 the "Flying Restaurant" -- it used 500 liters of pure alcohol for cooling and hydraulics. A MiG-25 air base practically lived off the alcohol stores for the plane.
To: antiRepublicrat
Well, at Khrunichev plant [ICBMs and airspace] the employees once managed to siphon off the entire railroad tankcar of ethanol - they lifted the sealed lid by just a bit, put in a long flexible hose, and tossed the other end of the long thin tube over the fence, hiding it in a large bush which grew there. By the time it came to light, 60 tons ethanol tankcar was completely empty - I used to know some participants.
34
posted on
11/09/2006 12:17:44 PM PST
by
GSlob
To: GSlob
the employees once managed to siphon off the entire railroad tankcar of ethanol That must have been one hell of a party.
To: antiRepublicrat
It was not a party - they would be coming to that bush with rather large storage vessels [say, about the size of a 5 gal gasoline can], fill those, clamp the hose again and walk away with the filled cans. The thing actually took them a few weeks, for they could not have a pilgrimage to that bush so as not to attract excessive attention. The plant railroad yard people were in on the scheme - they had to park that tank-car in the yard far corner next to the fence and not to disrupt the arrangement for a while.
36
posted on
11/09/2006 12:36:56 PM PST
by
GSlob
To: GSlob
This goes right along with everything I've read about how things really worked over there. It's kind of hard to maintain military readiness when the ground crew has sucked all the coolant out of the plane, or because the ICBM plant doesn't have that tanker of ethanol it needed.
To: HarmlessLovableFuzzball
38
posted on
11/09/2006 12:43:09 PM PST
by
ShandaLear
(Perfect People Need Support, too.)
To: edpc
There's an old Russian joke, probably from the Borscht Belt heyday, that goes something like "In a Russian drama,
everybody dies. In a Russian tragedy, everybody dies. In a Russian comedy, everybody dies, but they die happy."
I'm dredging my memory, but I think I first heard it from Soupy Sales, back in the 1960s.
And it probably should have stayed in the 1960s.
To: Calvin Locke
Yeah, I heard some examples of Russian humor from a former co-worker. Great guy, hard worker, but the jokes were....to be kind....offbeat.
40
posted on
11/09/2006 1:21:03 PM PST
by
edpc
(Violence is ALWAYS a solution. Maybe not the right one....but a solution nonetheless)
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