Saturday, June 13, 2026

Bruno (2009)

IMDb plot summary: Flamboyant, gay Austrian Brüno looks for new fame in America.
Directed by Larry Charles. Stars Sacha Baron Cohen, Gustaf Hammarsten, and Clifford Bañagale.

Bruno is a film by Sacha Baron Cohen where, much like he did with Borat, he plays an outlandish character interacting with real people in the real world. Here, Bruno is a gay Austrian model determined to become famous, but his vapidness and aggressive sexual drive is at odds with most of the people he encounters. I enjoyed Borat and pieces of Sacha Baron Cohen's TV show that launched these characters, but this one just REALLY didn't work for me. While Borat was about discovering people's lines and boundaries around racism and misogyny, and exposing what they thought they'd do when it was a safe space, Bruno focuses far, far too often on the title character basically sexually harrassing or assaulting people around him, and that never makes me laugh, even if it's happening to quote-unquote "bad people." There are one or two good moments -- one series of interviews with actors parents that is equal parts hilarious and horrifying, and one interview with a conversion therapy pastor where his attempts to explain the concept to someone as unintelligent as Bruno forces him to say some of the quiet parts out loud. But much more of the movie just seeing how explicit Bruno can get with someone before they get angry, and in a #MeToo world that absolutely includes gay men as victims, the attempt at satire disappears. Definitely one of the weaker efforts from this creator.

🎥 Brüno (2009)
📊 Ranked #3507/4225 on my Flickchart
🎯 Flickscore™: 17

lost to The Internship (held at #2156)
lost to Dear Evan Hansen (held at #3205)
beat Monsieur Hulot's Holiday (#3716 → #3717)
lost to Magic in the Moonlight (held at #3461)
beat Atomic Blonde (#3589 → #3590)
beat Arlington Road (#3526 → #3527)
lost to Highlander (held at #3494)
beat The Words (#3510 → #3511)
lost to The Peanut Butter Falcon (held at #3502)
lost to Talk to Her (held at #3506)
beat The Color of Pomegranates (#3508 → #3509)

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