USA TODAY US Edition

Borat is back in the time of the coronaviru­s pandemic

- Brian Truitt

Sacha Baron Cohen reprises his character and takes on the Trump administra­tion.

Borat’s at it again, with a plot getting in the way of his latest politicall­y charged cinematic shenanigan­s.

Fourteen years after the original “Borat” mockumenta­ry, Sacha Baron Cohen reprises his most infamous role as a wildly uncouth reporter in the silly, scattersho­t sequel “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm: Delivery of Prodigious Bribe to American Regime for Make Benefit Once Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan” ( ★★g☆; rated R; streaming Friday on Amazon Prime).

This time, Borat’s journey to America – secretly filmed during (and sending up) the pandemic – revolves around his teenage daughter, Tatur (a very game Maria Bakalova), but that narrative just serves as fleetingly funny, often momentum-killing filler between pranking unsuspecti­ng participan­ts, usually of the Republican persuasion. At least Cohen is aiming really high this time, right at folks who work in the White House.

His high-profile targets reflect Borat’s important new assignment. After his 2006 mission to make a documentar­y about America turned his homeland into a global laughingst­ock, Borat was sentenced to a gulag. The sentence ends when he gets a new order from the Kazakhstan president, who wants to snuggle up to “McDonald” Trump.

To earn Trump’s respect, Borat is sent back to America to deliver a monkey (who somehow is the country’s ministry of culture and also a porno star) to someone in Trump’s inner circle: Vice President Mike Pence.

After Borat takes a boat to Galveston, Texas, he learns something bad happened to the monkey, but discovers his daughter has stowed away, so he decides to gift Tatur to Pence. After Borat disrupts Pence’s real 2020 Conservati­ve Political Action Conference speech and tries to “deliver” the teen while dressed up as Trump – let’s just say the VP isn’t amused in one of the movie’s funniest scenes – father and daughter end up on a road to connection, though it’s a rocky one as Tatur becomes empowered as a woman of the world and the exceptiona­lly sexist Borat is left befuddled.

There is an intriguing meta aspect to “Subsequent Moviefilm”: People recognize Cohen-as-Borat, and it’s hilarious seeing random folks yelling, “High five!” at him or him finding a “Stupid Foreign Reporter” costume at a Halloween store. COVID-19 plays a key role as well: Pence’s speech mentions the golden age of having only 15 cases of coronaviru­s, and Borat ends up quarantini­ng with some Trump supporters.

It’s easy to wonder when watching Cohen, who garnered an Oscar screenplay nomination for the original “Bo

rat,” what’s real and what’s not. Cohen probably didn’t really go into lockdown with guys who insist Hillary Clinton drinks the blood of children (“It’s been said,” one of them says), especially with cameras running. (Honestly, after one of these movies, you just want to know how they pulled off the entire thing.) Thanks to Google, however, we know of some actual incidents that occur in the movie, including Cohen (as Borat as “Country Steve”) crashing a March for Our Rights rally and getting portions of the crowd whooping by singing offensive lyrics about Barack Obama, Anthony Fauci and others.

Cohen has a clear focus for his crassness, deploying his satirical weaponry on red-state conspiracy theories and showing Trump supporters wielding machine guns, Confederat­e flags and Nazi salutes. (There’s also a running joke with the Trumps depicted as an animated Disney-esque king and queen, and one scene takes a jab at the president’s, um, manhood.) Some of the partisan duping is rather ingenious, including one sequence where Tutar eats a plastic baby on a cupcake and to get it out of her stomach, she and her dad go to a pregnancy center and confuse a pro-life pastor.

Directed by Jason Woliner, “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” features an unexpected­ly strong ending that at least pays off some of the sweeter aspects of the family dynamic, plus wraps up on an activist note (“Now vote or you will be execute”). And while Cohen can be a great “serious” actor when he wants (see: “The Trial of the Chicago 7”), the absolute commitment to the over-thetop Borat persona continues to be admirable.

If the mankini still fits, wear it.

 ?? AMAZON STUDIOS ?? Sacha Baron Cohen reprises his role as a clueless Kazakhstan­i journalist in “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm.”
AMAZON STUDIOS Sacha Baron Cohen reprises his role as a clueless Kazakhstan­i journalist in “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm.”
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 ?? AMAZON STUDIOS ?? Borat (Sacha Baron Cohen) goes undercover as “Country Steve” when crashing a March for Our Rights rally in “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm.”
AMAZON STUDIOS Borat (Sacha Baron Cohen) goes undercover as “Country Steve” when crashing a March for Our Rights rally in “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm.”

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