Starring: Ben Stiller, Robert Downey Jr., Jack Black, Jay Baruchel, Brandon T. Jackson, Tom Cruise, Steve Coogan, Matthew McConaughey and Nick Nolte
Director: Ben Stiller
Writers: Ben Stiller, Justin Theroux and Etan Cohen
Producers: Stuart Cornfeld, Eric McLeod, Ben Stiller, Justin Theroux
Genre: Action, Comedy
Rating: MPAA – R for pervasive language including sexual references, violent content and drug material.
Distributor: Dreamworks
Pictures
With
the production of his first major motion picture falling months
behind schedule, director Damien Cockburn (Steve Coogan) is on his
last leg with his financier, multi-billionaire Les Grossman (Tom
Cruise). Pressured into saving his floundering production, and
getting his actors to work together any way he can, he takes the
advice of war hero John “Four Leaf” Tayback (Nick Nolte), author
of the wartime memoir his film is based on, and sends his actors into
the middle of the jungle with no more than a scene guide and their
blank-loaded weapons, to be filmed from hidden cameras throughout the
jungle. What
Cockburn
doesn't realize is that his actors are about to be in real danger, as
they are thrust into a conflict zone, to fend for their lives and
find out who they truly are.

Four Leaf tells Cockburn his plan.
|
Last
night, I had the option of seeing one of three films –
Tropic
Thunder, Pineapple Express
or
Hamlet 2
. I'm glad I
decided to go with
Tropic Thunder
,
not because the other two choices were bad, I wouldn't know, but
because it considerably exceeded my expectations. I went in expecting
to see a comedy movie about a group of idiot actors who got kidnapped
while shooting a film in the jungle. What I got instead, was a story
about four actors, each with their own unique personalities,
backstories and insecurities, finding and accepting their true
selves.
I
don't know what it is about Ben Stiller that makes him such a good
actor or director, but whatever it is that he is doing, he should
keep it up. It's true that some of the characters he plays feel like
slight rehashes of those from his previous films – Tugg Speedman
seems to have a little bit of a mix of Derek Zoolander and White
Goodman. It's not that Speedman's stupid, he just refuses to accept
the reality of what's going on around him, and Stiller pulls off that
attitude really well, mixing in a dash of stupidity during certain
scenes to push the laughs a little further.
Downey
Jr.'s Kirk Lazarus is an actor who gets far too invested in becoming
his characters, so much so that for his role in
Tropic
Thunder,
Lazarus undergoes a
pigment change operation to make himself black and refuses to drop
the persona, even off camera. I have not seen many Downey Jr. movies,
or Ally McBeal, but from the last two movies he starred in which I
actually did
see, Tropic Thunder and Iron Man,
his
skill for characters is nothing short of awe inspiring. It's not just
that he's a good comedy actor or how he portrays a classic stereotype
of a black guy from the 60s, but that he manages to play almost five
different characters in this movie, while still linking them to
Lazarus.

From left: Baruchel, Jackson, Stiller, Downey Jr. and Black
|
Jack
Black also has a stellar performance in this film, as mega comedy
star Jeff Portnoy. Portnoy's
The Fatties
comedy
franchise is a blatant jab at Eddie Murphy's multiple character roles
in
The Nutty Professor
franchise,
but the story actually makes good use of it, taking it from more than
a spoof and transforming it into part of the character's background
and linking it to his life of excess and substance abuse.
Brandon
T. Jackson makes his role as rapper and product whore Alpa Chino look
like it was a custom tailored suit. It fits, and it fits stunningly.
Finally, rounding out the main cast, Canadian actor Jay Baruchel's
performances as cast member Kevin Sandusky made me do a double take.
Having grown up watching Baruchel on televisions shows like
Popular
Mechanics for Kids
,
Are
You Afraid of the
Dark and
Undeclared
, and more
recently in films like
Knocked Up
,
I was thoroughly surprised by his performance in
Tropic
Thunder
. I didn't even recognize
that it was him until well into the film and I can only attribute
that to his skill as an actor or my poor eyesight, and my eyes aren't
that bad.

Canadian Jay Baruchel as cast member Kevin Sandusky
|
Tropic
Thunder
is a great comedy movie.
It's certainly not for kids, thanks to the level of violence, excess
of expletives, especially from Tom Cruise, drug references and
sexuality, but if you're at the right age and you're looking for a
good laugh, good story packed with morals, character growth and
explosions,
Tropic Thunder
will
fit the bill perfectly.
A