![]() |
(Photo: Ilpo Musto/LFI) |
With two months until Brit comedian Sacha Baron Cohen’s bumbling Kazakh reporter character Borat makes his big-screen debut, trailers are in theaters. They feature Borat setting off for America in a car pulled by a horse, after lustily kissing his sister good-bye. Officials at the Kazakhstan Embassy are divided over how to handle the film, since all that many Americans know of Kazakhstan comes from the character. Next month, Nursultan Nazarbayev, the Kazakh president, will visit the U.S., and his government will buy “educational” TV spots and print ads about the “real Kazakhstan.” But embassy spokesman Roman Vassilenko says the government is divided on how to respond. Anti-Borat hard-liners have already pulled the plug on borat.kz, Borat’s Kazakhstan-based Website. (In response, Borat claimed to “fully support my government’s decision to sue this Jew.”) Other leading Kazakhs believe efforts at muzzling Borat are clumsy and Sovietesque, and will only goad Cohen on. Cohen’s reps refused to allow him or his alter ego to respond to the controversy because it’s not close enough to the film’s release date.

Email
Print
How an Academy Award Is Won
Q&A: Megan Mullally and Nick Offerman
Is ChatRoulette the Future of the Web?
A Lost Fan Worries She’s Lost Her Faith
At the Meatball Shop, Comfort Food Reigns
Cloying Southern Food at Tipsy Parson
Two Locals Pick Their Top Hell's Kitchen Spots
Look Book: The Yoga Teacher 
The Rise and Fall of NY1's Dominic Carter
Is Democracy Killing Democracy?
Why the Olympics Won't Change the World