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Tropic Thunder (Unrated Director's Cut)
Tropic Thunder (Unrated Director's Cut)

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Director: Ben Stiller
Actors: Ben Stiller, Jack Black, Robert Downey Jr., Nick Nolte, Steve Coogan
Studio: Dreamworks Video
Category: DVD

List Price: $34.98
Buy New: $14.00
You Save: $20.98 (60%)



New (53) Used (15) Collectible (1) from $12.21

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 127 reviews
Sales Rank: 346

Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Dubbed), Spanish (Dubbed)
Rating: Unrated
Running Time: 107 minutes
Number Of Items: 2
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.7

MPN: PARD139454D
UPC: 097361394541
EAN: 0097361394541
ASIN: B001H5X7JS

Theatrical Release Date: 2008
Release Date: November 18, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Studio: Paramount Home Video Release Date: 11/18/2008 Run time: 120 minutes Rating: Ur

Amazon.com
It's not really a knock to say that nothing in Tropic Thunder is funnier than its first five minutes, so sly that--especially for people watching in theaters--you don't realize right away they are the opening minutes of the movie. This outrageous comedy begins with a series of fake previews, each introducing one of the main characters in the film-proper (not that there's anything proper about this film) and each bearing the familiar logo of a different motion picture studio: Universal, DreamWorks SKG, et al. Such playing fast and loose with corporate talismans verges on sacrilege, but it's an index of how much le tout Tinseltown endorses the movie as a demented valentine to itself. The premise is that the cast of a would-be "Son of Rambo" movie shooting in some Southeast Asian jungle get into a real shooting war with drug-smuggling montagnards. Don't ask--though the movie does have an answer--why such highly paid, usually ultra-pampered personnel as superhero Tugg Speedman (Ben Stiller), Mozart of fart comedy Jeff Portnoy (Jack Black), hip-hop artist Alpa Chino (Brandon T. Jackson), and five-time Oscar-winner Kirk Lazarus from Aus-try-leeah (Robert Downey Jr.) should be running through the jungle unattended and very vulnerable. It matters only that the real-life cast has a high time kidding their own profession and flexing their comedic muscles. Bonus points go to Stiller for co-writing the script (with Justin Theroux) and directing, and to Downey, brilliant as a white actor surgically turned black actor for his role and utterly committed to staying in character no matter what ("I don't drop character till I done the DVD commentary").

Be warned: The movie, too, is committed--to being an equal-opportunity offender. Its political incorrectness extends not only to Lazarus's black-like-me posturing but also Speedman's recent, Sean Penn-style Oscar bid playing a cognitively challenged farmboy--or, in Lazarus's deathless phrase, "going the full retard." Others in the cast include Steve Coogan as a director out of his depth, Nick Nolte as the Viet-vet novelist whose book inspired the film-within-the-film, Matthew McConaughey as Speedman's sun-blissed agent back home, and Tom Cruise--bald, fat-suited, and profane--as an epically repulsive studio head. Two hours running time is a mite excessive, but otherwise, what's not to like? --Richard T. Jameson




Stills from Tropic Thunder (Click for larger image)














Customer Reviews:   Read 122 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars Repugnant, with Only a Few Laughs to Offer   January 6, 2009
This is a "guy's movie." I am not a guy. I think I watched this in error.

What I really expected was some tongue-in-cheek, war-lite movie. It is sort of war-lite. Sort of. It's not really that funny -- I guess I expected some Zoolander antics. Oh, there's some of that, but mostly, this film falls flat.

With that said, there are some pretty funny things in this movie -- no, very, very funny things in this movie. It's unapologetically offensive throughout. I adored the false trailers preceding the film. When Ben Stiller flings Half-Squat and the child crawls out of the river and crosses his arms, I thought I would die laughing. When Stiller accidentally kills a fluffy sweetheart of the animal kingdom, I laughed a lung up my nose. Tom Cruise's unlikable character was delightfully over the top, and his dancing during the credits was simply fabulous. Robert Downey, Jr., was almost always a winner in every single scene.

Have you noticed something here? You know, the fact I mention only two out of the five "actors" who wander into the jungle? Yeah. Unfortunately, that's ultimately what killed it for me. Most of the characters were SO unlikable and unfunny that I found myself wishing they would all die -- even Stiller was not that enjoyable, and Jack Black was downright awful, and "Alpa Chino's" character was just plain bland. With the exception of Downey and Jay Baruchel (the not-star-powered fellow who played the kid in glasses, Keven Sandusky). Indeed, when Sandusky is hurt, I wanted to throw the DVD case at the screen. He was the only redeemable, nice character in the whole film. (I am not exaggerating. It's true.)

The plot is instantly forgettable and inane, which you would expect for any Stiller comedy; but since the movie takes a more serious turn near the end of the film (every single "big-name actor" has to be true to himself and face the lies he has constructed to keep himself afloat... sigh), the silly plot actually becomes a detriment.

Also, although the humor really hits the mark every now and then, it's just that... "every now and then". Most of the time you're busy hating the characters and hoping they find more land mines.

So in the end, I kept wondering... was this an adventure/lite-war movie attempting to be comedic and light-hearted, or was this a comedy that got a little too serious? Either way, it's a bit of a let-down. It's so dark, and the characters are so awful, that you end up leaving the film feeling trashy.



1 out of 5 stars Not for everyone   January 6, 2009
This movie is not for everyone. Some of the blood and guts humor was not funny to me. I know, it is just a movie........just a movie not for me.


2 out of 5 stars Disappointing   January 5, 2009
I thought it would be funnier but I was disappointed. Harold and Kumar was much better


3 out of 5 stars Tom Cruise, all is forgiven   January 5, 2009
Tropic Thunder works as a satire on war movies and Hollywood's attempt to reproduce the realities of war. It's a reminder that even behind the greatest of the genre (Schindler's List, The Thin Red Line, etc.) are greedy and manipulative producers. But the movie wants to do too much. It wants to have a discussion about race as well, and while that part of the film is done rather well, it pulls the movie in too many directions.

The cast is quite good: For once, Ben Stiller is consistently funny, Jack Black actually plays a character (and not himself), Nick Nolte does some decent character acting (Matthew McConaughey still hasn't figured out how to do that), Robert Downey, Jr. is in blackface (and black "voice"), and Tom Cruise - well, you'll just have to see Tom Cruise for yourself. Cruise is in no way subtle, he steals focus from the film, and I wouldn't want it any other way.

There is nothing politically incorrect in this film. Political incorrectness is a malicious use of language and images in order to keep a specific population of people in a lower status than the majority. Tropic Thunder is aware of social conventions and prejudices and has zero interest in seriously insulting anyone except bigots. In short, having a discussion or writing a book or making a movie about political incorrectness is not the same as actually promoting it. If you don't understand that, you probably won't like this movie.

There are lots of fun explosions and props straight out of a horror movie. And, thankfully, very little CGI. In the end, Tropic Thunder is one of Ben Stiller's better attempts at advanced humor. I wouldn't call it more mature than his other films, but it is better crafted and directed.



4 out of 5 stars Entourage-like hollywood satire is funniest film of the year   January 5, 2009
A group of prima donna actors and incompetent filmmakers travel to Vietnam to adapt a gritty story of the war horrors found in the jungles of Southeast Asia. Through a series of blunders, the actors unknowing land in the middle of a turf drug war and believe the gunfire and explosions going on around them are all part of the production.

No this isn't Oliver Stone and it isn't Francis Ford Coppola. It is Ben Stiller and an unbelievably accomplished troop of performers that includes superstars Tom Cruise and Matthew McConaughey in small roles and has Stiller, Jack Black and Robert Downey at the top of their games.

The jokes aimed at satirizing Hollywood come as fast as an episode of Entourage, a show which probably inspired McConaughey's fast-talking agent and Cruise's Machiavellian studio lord. A tough genre to satirize, the film levels its gag cannon directly at some of the best Vietnam films of the past decades and scores a direct hit.

The film's neatest achievement is the opening, as viewers know immediately the kind of actors involved because the film presents fake trailers for upcoming movies of the Stiller, Black and Downey characters. Not only do the trailers inform, but they also entertain, especially the one featuring Downey's multi-Oscar winner playing a gay monk in a period piece with Tobey Maguire (just one of many great cameos).

The film has a huge budget for casting, explosions, locations and all other aspects of making a big picture. And they spent their money well. Yeah, the "awards movies" like Slumdog and Button are better films, but nothing made this year did a better job achieving its ambitions than Tropic Thunder, and it should receive strong consideration as one of the ten best films of the year.


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