The Great Zohan 〈Top 10 INSTANT〉
By Alex Ripley
In 2008, the world was a very different place. Gas prices were spiking, the War on Terror was in its seventh year, and Adam Sandler was the undisputed king of a very specific brand of lucrative, low-brow comedy. When the trailer dropped for You Don’t Mess with the Zohan , audiences saw the same formula they expected: Sandler with a funny accent, slapstick violence, and a scene involving a fish (or in this case, a bottle of Sprite) used in an inappropriate manner. the great zohan
It is not a great film in the traditional sense. It is too long. Some jokes have aged poorly (the electroshock therapy "gag" is a tough watch). But as a text, it is fascinating. It suggests that Adam Sandler, hidden behind a tan and a terrible perm, might have made the most radical anti-war statement of the 21st century. By Alex Ripley In 2008, the world was
We don't need generals. We don't need politicians. We need a guy who can roundhouse kick a terrorist, then stop to tell him his split ends are looking tragic. It is not a great film in the traditional sense
The premise is absurd. Sandler plays Zohan with the physicality of a washed-up pro wrestler and the libido of a caffeinated rabbit. He defeats his enemies with impromptu breakdancing, catches bullets with his nose, and famously uses a hummus-fueled "cannon" to win a fight. On the surface, it’s a greatest hits reel of Happy Madison gross-out gags. The key to understanding The Zohan is recognizing that the juvenile humor is the delivery mechanism for the message. Sandler isn't just being dumb; he is weaponizing dumbness to disarm the viewer.