I love Adam Sandler. From Billy Madison to Happy
Gilmore to the Chanukah Song,
the predecessor of the Superbad generation has effortlessly conquered the
domain of slapstick comedy and inappropriate jokes. But damn you, Scuba Steve!
If you�re going to propagate misinformation about the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict, do it quietly -- or at least in your non-comedic life.
You Don�t Mess With
the Zohan, Sandler�s new flick, takes Hollywood chicanery and stereotypes
that denigrate Arabs to an unprecedented level -- surpassing hit flicks like
the Kingdom, the Siege, and every Arnold Schwarzenegger and Chuck Norris movie that
came before it. I group Zohan with
other shamelessly racist action movies because a film should at least be
minutely funny to be categorized as a comedy. For the Sandler diehards and
hilarity-loving skeptics, I should clearly state: using race and prejudices to engender laughter is not the problem.
Mel Brooks and the creators of South Park exploit stereotypes far beyond
anything Sandler has ever done, but unlike Zohan,
I don�t think insidious propaganda and underlying racism drive their comedy.
After all, if this hebetudinous clunker was just comedy, Sandler and company
wouldn�t have, as the New York Times reported,
sought out Arab actors to give the movie �legitimacy.� Their search was successful and a few token Arabs showed their
presence to innocuously inform the public that it is okay to vilify the crazy
towel-headed terrorists once again.
What makes this movie even worse than many of the
unfavorable movies made post-9/11 is Zohan�s
disarming presentation; it is a comedic approach to understanding the inner
workings of the substandard Arab people. Like the job stealing Mexicans, the
liquor store robbing Blacks, and the HIV infested gays, negative stereotypes in
Zohan strip down the Arab people to
RPG wielding animals that senselessly thirst for Jewish blood.
From the start of the film, Sandler�s character, Zohan, is
positioned as the altruistic hero -- an Israeli Mossad agent who reluctantly
kills Palestinian �terrorists,� while forgoing his real dream: to cut hair in
the US for Paul Mitchell. Zohan is �brave,� �lovable,� and �funny,� and even
his stereotypical chauvinism is eaten up by women (and men) throughout the
movie -- including his eventual Palestinian love interest, Dalia.
Compounded with played out, corny penis gags, the Israeli
narrative is interwoven into the fabric of the film, including propagandistic
reminiscences by Zohan�s father who recalls the oft-repeated myth of being
surrounded �on all sides� by powerful enemies during the Six Day War -- a war
in which Israel preemptively struck and dominated those �enemies.� In line with
Israeli and Western intelligence, Israel won the war in six days (and five
hours, as Zohan�s father dutifully reminds us) -- so much for existential
threats and heroic narratives. Other
historical revisions include a reference in a verbal battle between a
Palestinian and Israeli shop owner, in which the Palestinian proclaimed, �Give
it up, like you gave up the Gaza Strip!� This biting taunt, while not as
blatant as the common stereotype, infers that Israel �gave up� the Gaza Strip
and further insinuates that Israel had claim to it. The �humorous� jeer glosses
over the glaring reality: Israel still occupies Gaza�s borders, airspace,
imports and exports, and has economically strangulated and suffocated 1.4
million Palestinians in the world�s largest open-air prison.
But rewriting history (and regurgitating jokes from 1996) is
hardly the movie�s worst crime. The portrayal of Palestinians as ugly, dirty,
incompetent, stupid, goat loving terrorists was jammed down the viewer�s throat
more times than Zohan�s lame hummus jokes. It becomes obvious to the audience
why these good looking, suave, kindhearted Israelis have to kill these evil
Palestinian �terrorists� -- because they hate Jews more than they hate soap.
The most egregious grievance by a Palestinian �terrorist� throughout the film
was the stealing of a pet goat. Israel has killed more than 4,000 Palestinians
since the start of the second intifada, including nearly a 1,000 children, yet
the main gripe of these rabid �terrorists�
is a stereotypical love for hillside animals. This �inoffensive� scenario is
the equivalent of a scene in a Hollywood �comedy� made by a Palestinian
filmmaker stereotypically portraying Jews as pissed off about being sent to
Auschwitz because they found out that Hitler was going to make them pay for the
train ride.
A particular scene in Zohan
went beyond comprehension: Sandler�s casting agency rounded up a handful of
children to play Palestinians throwing rocks at Zohan. What does Zohan do in
response to the actions of these soon-to-be terrorists? He gleefully catches
the stones and turns them into the equivalent of a balloon animal. One is
supposed to toss aside any arising sensitivities and overlook the many
instances Israeli snipers and soldiers have shot Palestinian children in the
head or taken their eyes out with rubber bullets because of these rocks Zohan
takes with a smile. The posturing of the noble and affable Mossad agent is a
slick attempt to humanize Israel and make the Mossad (an outfit that has
engaged in countless operations of state terrorism) look like the valiant GI
Joe force in the Middle East combating jihadi thugs in the name of good. But
Sandler�s character is not only a hero, he�s also a humanitarian. There are
multiple scenes where Zohan informs the audience that Israelis do their best to
minimize the loss of innocent Palestinian life, when an examination of the
conflict by Israeli human rights organizations exposes quite the opposite.
Other stereotypes saturate the movie. The Palestinian salon
that Zohan gets a job at is described as a dump, Palestinians constantly cheer
for the �terrorists,� a crowd of Palestinians applaud the death of �heroic�
Zohan (which he faked), and the �terrorists� are so stupid and illiterate that
they purchase Neosporin instead of liquid nitrogen to make their bomb to kill
Zohan. There is no distinction made between Hezbollah, Hamas, jihadists, and
terrorist sexcapading sheiks. Furthermore, the film conveniently illustrates how Israelis in the US, as
�fellow� natives of the Middle East, suffer the same discrimination and
tribulations as Arabs in a post-911 world. Oddly, Israelis are passed off as
�brown� and �other� like the Arabs in the film, yet Zohan�s parents look like
European Ashkenazi Jews. Moreover, while Israelis are shown as native hummus loving
Middle Easterners, Zohan�s family is portrayed distinctively differently from
the backwards Arabs. Zohan�s parents are sweet, comforting, reasonable and
accepting from beginning to end, not rigid like their Arab counterparts. Even
when Zohan finally captures Dalia�s heart, his parents show up in America and
warmly embrace their relationship without question -- while Dalia and others
resist the notion of a courtship between the two and tells Zohan that her
family would never accept him. Ah, if only all Arabs could just get to know
Israelis and see how kind, generous, and amorous they all are, the sooner we
could all sit in a circle singing Kumbaya over s�mores and unfunny Zohan hummus
jokes.
The worst dialogue throughout this 102-minute laughless
action flick is made by Dalia (played by Emmanuelle Chriqui), Zohan�s eventual
Palestinian love interest. She serves at the omnipotent propagandist -- blaming
the troubles of the conflict on �extremists� and �hate� on both sides. She
endlessly and vaguely laments about how much �hate� there is �over there,� and
describes to Zohan that things are �different here.� As any knowledgeable
American knows, Palestinians and Israelis love each other here in the US; they
frequently have bake sales together; they form sit-ins for blind coexistence on
college campuses; and have Palestinian/Israeli karaoke nights where they sing
their favorite Beatles tunes like Give Peace a Chance. What Sandler, and co-writers Judd
Apatow and Robert Smigel, fail to understand is that before there was Hamas,
Yasser Arafat, Fatah, the PLO, or any resistance movement, there was the
dispossession of the Palestinian people, whereby 780,000 indigenous
Palestinians were displaced from their homeland by Jewish gangs and terror
groups. Flash forward 60 years and the Palestinian people are living in squalor
in demolished towns and refugee camps enduring a 40-year occupation that
strangulates their economy and diminishes any semblance of normalcy or a proper
life. What we are to believe by watching this film is that if everyone would
just stop �hating� (which Israelis are depicted as clearly willing to do, while
Palestinians resist it vehemently), Israelis and Palestinians could
effortlessly live together in harmony. But �hate� has little to do with a conflict
rooted in a people�s desire for basic human rights and an end to oppression.
In the end, everything ends up happy and joyful: Zohan gets
the girl, he saves the block from a conniving mall developer, and the
�terrorists� stop terrorizing. But the jovial ending left a sour taste in my
mouth. As nearly a dozen �nameless� Palestinians were killed by innocent and
heroic Israeli soldiers last week and another report of the humanitarian
catastrophe in Gaza went unnoticed in the US press, people were laughing all
over the country at how stupid, feeble, violent and backwards Arabs are. A
diehard Sandler fan proclaimed: �He's making it for 13-year-old boys. It's
Critic Proof.� That�s what scares me most of all.
Remi
Kanazi is the editor of the forthcoming anthology of poetry, Poets For
Palestine, which can be pre-ordered at www.PoetsForPalestine.com. Remi
can be contacted at remroum@gmail.com.