Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Andre translates his prank comedy into film

But it was no easy feat for comedian, production team

- By Josh Rottenberg

Comedian Eric Andre loves nothing more than to grab someone else’s reality and bend it toward absurdity.

For nearly a decade, his Adult Swim anti-talk show “The Eric Andre Show” has served up 11-minute barrages of cringe-inducing chaos and frenetic surrealism.

Every once in a while, reality bites back — and a year ago, it delivered Andre a doozy.

Just days before his prank-comedy film “Bad Trip” was set to premiere at the 2020 South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas, the World Health Organizati­on declared COVID-19 a pandemic, bringing the world to a grinding halt and throwing Andre’s film, which he had spent four years bringing to fruition, into limbo. As much as he appreciate­s an unpredicta­ble twist, he was not happy about this one.

“It was incredibly depressing,” Andre, 37, said. “We didn’t know what was going to happen. I was drinking White Russians in my bathrobe for a month, throwing chicken wings at my TV screen, all bitter.”

Fortunatel­y for Andre, Netflix swooped in and picked up “Bad Trip” from Orion Pictures. The film is now available to stream, opening Andre to an audience far beyond the stoned college students and comedy nerds who have thus far made up much of his fan base. “They’re kind of the best venue in town,” Andre said of Netflix. “Now the movie is dubbed and subtitled in 60 languages for their 200 million subscriber­s worldwide. It’s a huge silver lining to the corona(virus) fallout.”

In the anarchic tradition of films like “Borat” and “Bad Grandpa,” the hidden-camera comedy follows best friends Chris (Andre) and Bud (Lil Rel Howery) as they travel across the country so

Chris can be reunited with the girl of his dreams (Michaela Conlin). Tiffany Haddish co-stars as Bud’s escaped-convict sister Trina, as do numerous innocent bystanders who are unwittingl­y roped into the pranks that Andre concocts along the way.

Translatin­g Andre’s punk-rock, Dadaist style of comedy into a coherent film was no easy feat. In 2013, when Andre’s agent first suggested he meet with “Jackass” producer Jeff Tremaine about making a prank-based movie, he and writing partner Dan Curry pitched a string of disjointed ideas akin to what he had been

doing on his show.

“We were like, ‘It just has to be a bunch of crazy… pranks’,” Andre said. “But what Jeff had learned from ‘Bad Grandpa’ is if you’re going to bring an audience across 90 minutes of footage, you need a story. You need to respect the principles of feature-length filmmaking and have a tried-and-true archetypal story with sympatheti­c characters that you invest in emotionall­y.”

Having never written anything with a real narrative, Andre threw himself into learning how to craft a screenplay. “I really had to go back to school. I went to Robert McKee’s ‘Story Seminar’ at a hotel by the airport. I read (the screenwrit­ing guide) ‘Save the Cat!’ I did all that.”

Eventually, Andre and his collaborat­ors, including longtime “Andre Show” director Kitao Sakurai,

settled on a simple buddycomed­y road-movie formula. “We kind of used ‘Tommy Boy’ and ‘Dumb and Dumber’ as the template for our story,” Andre said. “We realized we needed a really simple, recognizab­le plot — and, in fact, the more kind of cliched and iconic the tropes were, the better it was.”

With the story providing narrative structure, the challenge then became figuring out how to stage pranks that would not only deliver Andre’s brand of mayhem but also serve to advance the story. “We didn’t want the film to become a mishmash of random pranks; we always wanted there to be a thread to it,” said Sakurai, who directed the film. “In the writers’ room, we would come up with a really funny prank on its own then reverse-engineer it to fit into the story of what the characters were doing.”

The process was often arduous. A number of pranks required an elaborate setup in advance. At other times, Andre would have to improvise in character with someone for upward of an hour in order to coax the person to say what was needed to advance the plot.

On the whole, though, Andre said he tried to strike a more playful tone with his pranks than, say, Sacha Baron Cohen, who has deliberate­ly set out to skewer the small-mindedness and hypocrisy of his targets in “Bruno” and the two “Borat” films. “We showed Sacha an early cut of the movie,” Andre said. “He laughed and said, ‘You know, my movies are set up to expose … rich, white oligarchs. And your movie shows the beauty and the humanity of working-class people and people of color.’ ”

In person, Andre comes across as calmer and more grounded than his in-yourface, dials-cranked-to-11 persona might suggest. As much as it may shock his fans, he even practices transcende­ntal meditation.

While he considers himself more of a merry prankster than a political bomb-thrower — and has at times signed on to more mainstream projects like the sitcom “Don’t Trust the B— in Apartment 23” and the 2019 remake of “The Lion King” — Andre is aware that his work has the potential to offend some sensibilit­ies, a growing concern among comedians in the era of cancel culture.

“Unfortunat­ely, anyone with internet access can take any joke, recontextu­alize it and strip all of its context and its intent and kind of use it for their own virtue signaling, which is posing as activism but it’s actually the passive-aggressive cyberbully­ing of the week,” Andre said. “Sometimes it is righteous and justified — it’s the whole spectrum — and that’s what’s tough. But as far as my comedy, I can’t function as an artist or comedian and make creative choices and worry every step whether I’m going to offend somebody. I’m always going to offend somebody. But I can rest easy at night because all the comedic choices I make are never to hurt anybody or be abusive.”

If audiences embrace “Bad Trip” the way he hopes they will, Andre says he’d love to do another prank film, even if his growing fame requires him to more carefully disguise his identity next time.

“Haircuts and clothing go a long way,” he said. “I’m not worried. But I think that’s like Champagne problems. And I’d cross that bridge when I got there.”

 ?? DIMITRY ELYASHKEVI­CH/NETFLIX ?? Eric Andre, left, as Chris Carey and Lil Rel Howery as Bud Malone in “Bad Trip,” now streaming.
DIMITRY ELYASHKEVI­CH/NETFLIX Eric Andre, left, as Chris Carey and Lil Rel Howery as Bud Malone in “Bad Trip,” now streaming.

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