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| 1.78:1 DVD capture: Looking for Comedy... |
The DVD |
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| Warner presents Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World on DVD in a 1.78:1 anamorphic widescreen transfer. Both the image and the Dolby Digital 5.1 audio are the very definition of serviceable, though I did appreciate the attention paid within the mix itself to the congested streets of New Delhi during interior scenes. (It just never feels like we're actually in New Delhi because the sound is mostly shackled to the centre channel.) For what it's worth, every last Finding Nemo joke comes through with piercing clarity. In the video department, shadow detail could be a little stronger. Extras include four "Additional Scenes" and the film's theatrical trailer; an elision in which Brooks seeks out his own films at a video store in India is typical--what hit the cutting-room floor is more of the same narcissism by way of self-flagellation. What happened to the Brooks of Modern Romance or even Defending Your Life? I sure do miss that guy.-Bill Chambers |
The Film
excerpted from a longer review found here
The most frustrating thing about Albert Brooks' crushingly boring, infuriatingly unfunny Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World (hereafter Comedy) is the possibility that such was the intention all along. 'Lost in Arabia' (well, India and Pakistan--let's not get crazy, here) finds Brooks doing a high-wire act with post-modernism--the same one he's been doing his whole career, as it happens. At some point, though, it's fair to wonder how long you can push self-awareness before it finally flies apart in a storm of narcissistic deconstruction. Mull over, if you will, a moment where Brooks (as Brooks) recreates one of his classic gags--involving the world's most ironically-tragic ventriloquist--in the middle of an interminable stand-up routine staged in a New Delhi auditorium, closing his act with the dummy (the wooden one) drinking a glass of water. It's Brooks, and Brooks' film, in microcosm: a man who returns the term "mortification" to ritual and religion while being incapable of subsuming the belief that he's still the smartest guy in the room. The trick of Comedy is that in making a movie that isn't very funny about a man who isn't very funny in the middle of a gulf of cultural misunderstanding that's especially not very funny, Brooks hopes to draw a corollary between how the troubles of the world boil down to everybody's inability to communicate. As revelations go, it's not earth-shattering. Guess it goes without saying that it's also not worth the effort to get there.
Comedy opens with Penny Marshall in a casting session for her hopefully-fictional remake of Harvey (not that Harvey couldn't stand to be remade--what's scary is the thought that Marshall might still have a directing career), blasting Brooks' remake of The In-Laws just prior to Brooks showing up for an obligatory cup-of-coffee and a thank-you-very-much. It establishes the premise of the film (an aging, unpopular Jewish comic really needs a job) as well as that Brooks is possibly trying to make another clever point regarding his own alleged inadequacy by shooting the picture like a blind longshoreman, lighting everything in a flat, "documentary" style. Once Marshall rejects Brooks for a role in a remake because he starred in a remake she doesn't like, it all gets so thuddingly, obviously, pleased with its wooden intellectualism that it could've been written by John Kerry. I do understand nuance and the kind of social satire that allowed Brooks' Lost in America to soar--and I also understand that Comedy is about as nuanced as a barium enema.
Summoned to Washington DC and given an assignment to infiltrate India and Pakistan to figure out what tickles the Muslim funny bone, Brooks complains about his airplane ride, his office, his handlers, and the impossibility of his ever producing a five-hundred page report for the State Department. The United States' bureaucracy is on the chopping block initially and we laugh good-naturedly at an old joke told again (if not particularly well), while a call-centre Mecca where dozens of Indians answer questions on behalf of American corporations threatens to be interesting. But then the general shittiness of India is brought into the crosshairs, and the laughter, without enough of a connection linking globalization to said shittiness, turns ugly. Brooks' bad time stops being a result of his State Dept. goons and starts being a result of the Third World. It could be that Brooks is illustrating how "Brooks" can only see the troubles of the world through the prism of his own deadly inconsequence in the public eye (certainly this is inferred when a spy overhears him going on about a bomb--referring to his show, naturally), but ultimately Comedy doesn't have any identity more dominant than this exhausting, plangent, pathetic vanity piece for a guy who once turned self-immolation into an art--and is now trying to stay current by turning it into a screed.-Walter Chaw
© Film Freak Central; filmfreakcentral.net. This review may not be reprinted, in whole or in part, without the express consent of its author.
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DVD GRADES:
Image B+
Sound A-
Extras D+ |
DVD VITALS:
Running Time
98 minutes
MPAA
PG-13
Aspect Ratio(s)
1.78:1 ONLY, 16x9-enhanced
Languages
English DD 5.1
CC
Yes
Subtitles
English, French, Spanish
DVD-9
Region One Warner

Buy the LOOKING FOR COMEDY IN THE MUSLIM WORLD poster at Moviegoods (click on image)
What's coming out on DVD? Check the release calendar
AUTEUR'S CORNER
also by Albert Brooks
THE MUSE
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Published: August 28, 2006
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