Faux 'Tropic Thunder' Promo Offends, Is Taken Down
Filed under: Action, Comedy, Dreamworks, Movie Marketing
Since it doesn't open for another week, I'm not allowed to spill much about what I thought of Tropic Thunder, but suffice it to say, the laughs get off to an extra-early start with a collection of fake trailers featuring our leads as the film's stars in other projects. Along the same lines came promotional efforts that included a fake trailer for a fake making-of doc (well, the DVD will prove that one) and several websites for those characters and their movies.
One of those websites was for Ben Stiller's character, Tugg Speedman, in his high-profile bid for awards glory as a mentally disabled farmhand in Simple Jack. However, out of context, this high-concept faux-site has stirred up concern from the likes of many very real disability rights groups -- among them, the Special Olympics -- and according to Variety, the site has been pulled down in response.
The concern is fairly grounded, but it's a relatively minor kerfuffle that will damage neither the image of the represented individuals nor the performance of the film when it opens... a film which just so happens to boast a terrifically astute assessment of performances similar to Speedman's in the real industry, no part of which can stand to be repeated here and especially now.










Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
8-06-2008 @ 4:17PM
AJ Wiley said...
Ugh. I hate how politically correct we've become.
This is satire, people (and completely accurate satire, from the very little I've heard/seen). Get over it.
Reply
8-06-2008 @ 4:24PM
Kirk Lazarus said...
"You never go full retard"
8-07-2008 @ 10:12AM
Jennifer said...
I have to agree about this PC bullshite. If there's a joke somebody somewhere's gonna get offended. Who the f*ck cares? Grow a set ppl!
8-10-2008 @ 10:09PM
doihavtasay said...
Say whatever flippant remark you like, the fact remains that these so called jokes, cause real harm to real people.
Reply
8-10-2008 @ 10:16PM
William Goss said...
State whatever broad defense that YOU like, but the fact remains that I have seen the film and know that the humor stems from the fact that the characters (that is to say, the fictional actors) think it's alright to partake in such roles because the industry they work within rewards it. The humor comes from how wrong we as a real audience knows such presumptions are.
If you honestly believe that the average moviegoer will come out of the film more ignorant of and more callous towards the mentally impaired, then maybe you ought to picket whatever movies also attempt to showcase such handicaps in a kinder fashion -- after all, aren't those actors causing just as much 'real harm' with their fake performances?