Stiller's "Tropic Thunder" is satire at its finest
Abigail Dredge
Issue date: 9/1/08 Section: Entertainment
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Stiller carefully designed the movie to be seen from a third-party perspective. The opening of the film blends in with the coming attractions with a series of mock previews featuring Brandon T. Jackson, a fictitious rapper named "Alpa Chino" surrounded by barely clothed women in a commercial for his energy drink obnoxiously labeled "Booty Sweat." The next preview is for a movie with a striking resemblance to "The Nutty Professor" called "The Fatties", where Jeff Portnoy (Jack Black) makes up a cast of an overweight and overly flatulent family. By the third preview, the audience catches on to the fictitious nature of the prospective movies when Kirk Lazarus (Robert Downey Jr.) and Toby McGuire's new controversial film about homosexual monks is advertised. To top off the absurd line up of films is the sixth in a series of "Scorcher" films in which Tugg Speedman (Ben Stiller) continually saves the world armed only with a gun and a one liner.
This diverse group of actors makes up the cast for "Tropic Thunder" a film within the film itself, based on a fictitious book written by a Vietnam Veteran. With an entirely ludicrous budget, the movie is speculated to be the most extravagant and expensive ever made. However, after an accidental waste of a $40 million display of explosives, Les Grossman (Tom Cruise) the maliciously rutheless and filthy rich producer decides to cut the rookie director off. The idea to shoot the movie "guerilla-style" comes from the writer of the book, "Four Leaf" (played by Nick Nolte). He is fed up with the spoiled actors and thinks the real fear of being in the jungle would not only be cheaper but capture the essence of his novel better. As one might guess, this idea turns into a total disaster, deserting the Hollywood hot heads in the middle of territory protected by an adolescent drug-lord, who is ironically terrifying.


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