Bummed about Bruno? Austrians ‘get ueber it’
07.09.2009 2:57pm EDT
(Vienna) Austrians could be forgiven for bristling at “Bruno.”
After all, the film character boasts that his fame is second only to Hitler’s and says he just wants “to achieve zee Austrian dream – find a job, get a dungeon und raise a family in it.”
Yet rather than recoil at British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen’s new spoof about a flamboyantly gay Austrian fashionista, most Viennese are taking Bruno’s own advice: “Get ueber it!”Judging from a smattering of look-alike contests and Web sites cheerfully hawking skintight T-shirts and short-shorts, some even seem to be embracing their inner Bruno.
“We can all learn a lot from Bruno: style, zest for life, versatility, fearlessness,” Doris Knecht, a columnist for the Kurier newspaper, wrote in her blog ahead of Universal Pictures’ worldwide release Friday.
“This man is proud of his homeland, so we’re proud of him,” she said, proclaiming: “Austria has a new ambassador. Thanks, Bruno!”
Not everyone shares her enthusiasm – least of all a real ambassador: Emil Brix, Austria’s top envoy to Britain.
In an interview with Austrian public broadcaster ORF aired Thursday, Brix denounced “Bruno” as “completely improper and unsuitable.”
He said he found Baron Cohen’s flippant references to Hitler and to Josef Fritzl – convicted in March of imprisoning his daughter for 24 years in a dungeon and fathering her seven children – cheap, crass and offensive.
“Everyone should speak out against such a thing,” he said, warning that it will tarnish Austria’s image.
ORF panned the film in a review. “A lot of expense for a few punch lines,” it said.
Most Austrians, though, seem to be taking “Bruno” in stride.
They’re used to being ridiculed for the country’s past complicity with the Nazis, its flourishing far-right political fringe and the Fritzl affair, which came less than two years after a similar case involving a young woman who escaped after being held captive 8 1/2 years in an underground cell.
They’ve also taken a ribbing over Austria-born Arnold Schwarzenegger, initially for his “Terminator” films and most recently for becoming California governor. Outsiders have made cracks about lederhosen and yodeling ever since “The Sound of Music” – still unseen by the vast majority of Austrians – debuted in 1965.
“Austrians like to laugh at themselves as long as no one gets hurt,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Peter Launsky-Tieffenthal said Thursday.
Underscoring the mischievous mood, he quipped: “I hope the lederhosen industry gets a boost from ‘Bruno’ in this time of recession.”
Some Austrians already are familiar with Bruno, a character Baron Cohen has channeled on “Da Ali G Show.”
Although Vienna isn’t exactly in the throes of Bruno fever, movie posters depicting him in barely bum-concealing bright yellow lederhosen, a matching alpine cap and an over-the-shoulder pout adorn virtually every bus and tram stop in the Austrian capital.
Fans also have been hawking clothing and merchandise emblazoned with Bruno-isms like “Get ueber it!” “Nicht nicht!” and “Ich don’t think so.”
“Naturally ‘Bruno’ is tasteless and always has one foot planted over the border of decency. But what else can you expect from Sacha Baron Cohen?” said Alex Rechsteiner, a philosophy student.
Austrian media generally have played down suggestions that “Bruno” will do irreversible damage and even discourage tourists from visiting. They note that some Australians feared the same after “Crocodile Dundee” was released, yet if anything, that film may have lured foreigners.
Baron Cohen is used to getting flak for his work.
After the 2006 surprise smash “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan,” officials and ordinary people in the former Soviet republic took great offense at being mercilessly lampooned as an incestuous and boorish backwater.
In the end, it didn’t seem to inflict any lasting damage: Next year, Kazakhstan will hold the chairmanship of the 56-nation Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
Alfons Haider, an openly gay Austrian cabaret singer and TV host who some believe helped inspire the Bruno character, has expressed admiration for Baron Cohen while repudiating what he describes as the movie’s far-right and anti-Semitic undertones.
Vienna is one of Europe’s most gay- and lesbian-friendly capitals, and its annual Life Ball – a glittery event that draws celebrities from around the world and raises millions for HIV/AIDS research – is a highlight of the social calendar.
“How could mein film be ein PR-disaster for Austria?” the daily newspaper Oesterreich quoted Baron Cohen as saying in characteristic zis-und-zat “Bruno-speak” in an interview published Thursday. “Hitler, Fritzl, Bruno. Zat has to be ein upswing!”




If it’s just a movie, why does black face cause such an uproar? Should African Americans just get over it?
Just got back from seeing it. It was appalling, offensive, moronic and just plain gross.
I laughed til I cried.
It’s just a movie folks, and I for one get a not so disguised kick out of seeing some kinds of str8 people squirm once in a while.
Bravo Bruno.
A reviewer made a really cool observation about Bruno. He said that it would have been more daring if Bruno made more appearances in the movie within the gay community and then they filmed gay people’s reactions to Bruno.
I agree! That would have been *really* interesting.
Also, in the reader comments, someone attempted to out the reviewer and make the silly claim that a gay man couldn’t review a gay themed movie without bias. (For what it was worth, the reviewer gave the film a lukewarm 2 out of 4 stars.) It was quite a free for all in those reader comments.
>So have a good laugh at the expense of your rights, dignity and equality.
Show me one study that shows the success of Bruno (which is yet to be determined) having a statistical effect on the progress of ENDA, repealing DOMA, ending DADT, or furthering marriage equality.
Oh, you can’t do that?! What you’re saying is pure conjecture on your part? Then why don’t you stop wagging your finger at us, lighten up, and redirect your efforts to effective politics instead of bullying attempts resist pop culture.
…and feel free to check out “The Celluloid Closet” to read about times when it was actually valid to fight for better representation in the movies. That’s just not the case anymore.
I’m all for comedy and making fun but, really: a straight man playing an over-the-top, outrageous sterotype of a gay man just doesn’t quite sit well with me.
I saw the premier last night. Was he making fun of gay stereotypes? Sure. Did anyone think it a truthful representation of gay culture? Of course not. It was so absurd that it, if anything, just showed the absurdity of those kinds of stereotypes.
All I know is that I saw a theater, packed to the brim with teenagers, that was surprisingly in the defense of gay people. Ghasps and appropriate awkward laughs over many of the homophobe’s actions in the movie, combined with a complete lack of gay jokes/jabs by the teenagers, was refreshing to say the least. I had never before been that comfortable being with my partner around so many straight strangers.
PS: If you really think Borat promotes racism, or Bruno promotes homophobia, I think you have a few cogs loose … or are just WAY the hell too overly sensitive. FAR too many people on this site are happy to stab our friends (gay or straight) in the name of PC BS … and if we don’t lighten up and let them laugh with us, they are just going to laugh at us some more.
I’m definitely looking forward to seeing this today.
Get over it people its a comedy movie. You American queers take yourselvs way too seriously. Loosen up, he’s making fun of all the homophobic freaks out there. And maybe us gays a bit as well but if you can’t take a joke then there is something wrong.
The message I got from that movie is that being homophobic is understandable kinda rather endearing. It’s also harmless.. the victims of it aren’t hurt and they kinda ask for it, anyway.
I, for one, think this is a positive thing for the lgbt community. I mean, even just 10 years ago such a movie would have been considered obscene. Now most people dont even bat an eyelash at overtly-gay acting people. Except for the religious nuts and the super-masculine closet ‘gangsta’ dudes.
I just never thought he was/is at all funny; unless one enjoys a kick to the groin…lol. But, I also do not think Adam Sandler is funny either!
For all the gays who think it’s just a movie: It’s not. It’s real life. And people being grossed out or laughing or offended by gay men and gay sex are the ones that control your lives. The same people that support DADT, DOMA and a million other little and small instituational and cultural barriers that confine you to second-class citizenship. So have a good laugh at the expense of your rights, dignity and equality. Here’s to washing down those things with your extra large soda and popcorn. After all, it’s just a movie. And your civil rights will get here eventually. When the show is over…hopefully.
I have no time for this guy, and his crap. His first movie was based on racism,and his second was based on homophobia – what a champ!
LOL. I happen to be heading to Austria in two weeks on a completely unrelated trip, but I am planning to tell everybody there that the trip was inspired by the Brüno movie.
I wouldn’t watch this crap on my death bed with a morphone drip.