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Review: Yellowbrickroad
Reviews
Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World
By
PETER KEOUGH
|
January 19, 2006
LOOKING FOR COMEDY IN THE MUSLIM WORLD
" alt="photo of 'LOOKING FOR COMEDY IN THE MUSLIM WORLD'">
2.5
Stars
Albert Brooks is always looking for something elusive in places that are amorphous or unattainable, places like America in
Lost in America
, Life in
Real Life
, and the Afterlife in
Defending Your Life
. When he gets more specific, his satire gets less precise. Such is the case with his latest, which boasts the funniest title of the year. It’s also the funniest part of the movie. Brooks, as usual, plays himself, a comic actor and filmmaker desperate for employment who takes up the State Department’s offer to find out what makes Muslims laugh. Rather than head for Baghdad or Beirut, Brooks settles on India, which though it’s home to quite a few Muslims seems a little off topic. There he has trouble finding comedy not only in the Muslim world but in his movie, and viewers might share the bewilderment of his Indian assistant (Sheetal Sheth) when she asks, “Is that a joke?” Brooks deserves credit for taking on such a taboo topic, but the results don’t bode well for political comedy.
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