'Tropic Thunder' Braces For 'Retard' Backlash
Posted by STV at 2:20 AM on August 5, 2008
Several months ago, the red-band trailer for Tropic Thunder suggested that not only could Ben Stiller's Hollywood satire be summer's most surefire gutbuster, but also that its trailer-within-a-trailer — featuring Stiller as the developmentally disabled title character of the Oscar-bait drama Simple Jack — portended perhaps the best movie never made. (And look! It even has its own Web site!) But having seen Thunder and thus the degree to which Simple Jack plays a role in the story, we think we got our fill: "You went full retard, man" Robert Downey Jr.'s Method actor (in blackface!) tells Stiller's slumping action hero. "Never go full retard."
His logic is crystalline, but alas, its political incorrectness is drawing even deeper consideration this morning as disability advocates wage war on the R-Word:
It's just good clean fun, the studio might say, pointing out that the movie also pokes fun at racial stereotypes. It's a sendup of old Hollywood films that trotted out able-bodied actors in disability drag, like Tom Hanks in Forrest Gump, Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man and Sean Penn in I am Sam. Stiller isn't laughing at people with intellectual disabilities, I can imagine his publicist saying. He's laughing at the way Hollywood portrays them.
But for the estimated 14.3 million Americans with cognitive disabilities and their families, such arguments may be problematic. These people share a history of segregation and exclusion, and report that what many call the "R-word" reinforces negative social attitudes just as surely as racial, ethnic and sexually oriented slurs do. ...
"What we are seeing already is a cause of great concern," [said Peter V. Berns, executive director of the disability activist org The Arc of the United States]. "People with intellectual and developmental disabilities have had a lot of pejorative labels assigned to them over the years. I'd like to think that we as a society are getting past that, but we are seeing one after the other examples that this is not the case."
Indeed, Stiller's joke is on Hollywood and the likes of Hanks, Hoffman, Penn and others — not to mention the punchlines implicit in an industry whose urge to outdo itself seems directly inverse to its ability to moderate taste. That's all Tropic Thunder is in the end, and really, if it didn't go "full retard" the same way it goes "full megalomania" (with Tom Cruise) or "full junkie" (with Jack Black), it would be an even more protest-worthy clusterfuck of pulled punches and missed opportunities. We'd hate it, and those 14.3 million Americans (and their families) would still face much worse every few years come Oscar season. They still may, of course, but we have faith that once the "full retard" is out of the bottle, it's gone for good. Let the healing begin.
- 'Once upon a time ... There was a retard' [Patricia E. Bauer via NYT]

Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
There are currently no AU comments for this post.
WGARefugee
Posted 2:59 AM 5/8/08
In a past incarnation, I worked with developmentally disabled people. My coworkers and I all used the word "retarded" because we hated the superficiality of political correctness and it's about a hundred times easier to say than "developmentally disabled."
WGARefugee
Fry_Bread_Power
Posted 2:46 AM 5/8/08
Sheesh...it's like you can't make a joke these days without some retard misinterpreting it and getting all offended.
Fry_Bread_Power
kookla
Posted 2:41 AM 5/8/08
Perhaps someone should have given 'tard career advice to Rosie O'Donnell.
kookla
Old No.7
Posted 2:38 AM 5/8/08
I, for one, welcome our new retard overlords.
Old No.7
Losin_it
Posted 2:36 AM 5/8/08
If "retard" is forced out of the English language, I'm afraid my parents will no longer know how to address me.
Losin_it
Juancho
Posted 2:36 AM 5/8/08
Who wants to ride the bus with Simple Jack?
Juancho
el smrtmnky
Posted 3:13 AM 5/8/08
+ Watch video
marshmallows anyone?
el smrtmnky
Losin_it
Posted 3:11 AM 5/8/08
@WGARefugee: Exactly. It's not necessarily bad that advocates for certain groups can be extremely sensitive to public perceptions...it's that they sometimes get hung up too much on the superficial fluff.
Losin_it
Maria
Posted 3:29 AM 5/8/08
You forgot Shia:
+ Watch video
Maria
Mr-Busy
Posted 4:51 AM 5/8/08
I could watch that Rosie O'Donnel clip all day. It is from The View, right?
Mr-Busy
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
Posted 5:27 AM 5/8/08
@el smrtmnky: Wowzers - can't we have one great American actor bring some subtlety to full retard mode? When it's played like this all shouty and mouthy it's completely indistinguishable from Will Ferrell or any of my Delta Chi friends on bad ludes.
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
Little Mintz Sunshine
Posted 5:09 AM 5/8/08
So Sherri Shepard gets to use the N-word and the R-word without any recrimination.
Little Mintz Sunshine
Losin_it
Posted 5:37 AM 5/8/08
@Edward Bulwer-Lytton: Sooner or later there will be a backlash against this kind of obvious hypocrisy, but with my luck not until I am flogged for accidentally using a forbidden word at a company barbeque someday.
Losin_it
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
Posted 5:31 AM 5/8/08
@Little Mintz Sunshine: Way of the world my friend. If she were half Chinese she could have done Rosie's foreign language bit too.
Edward Bulwer-Lytton
gwendolyn
Posted 6:29 AM 5/8/08
'Full Retard' came out of the bottle sometime in December, 2000, thanks to Sandra Day-O'Conner, James Baker III and a pitiful MSM.
Too late to unbreak that wind, unfortunately...
gwendolyn
raincoaster
Posted 2:31 PM 5/8/08
That poor horse looks mortified, and for good reason.
raincoaster
hellsbelle
Posted 11:26 PM 5/8/08
Haha!! I think mortified horses show a bit more white of the eyes...that one just looks depressed!?
I'll take this with a grain of salt...it's a comedy after all. I hear that Stiller and RDJ are supposed to be hilarious...
hellsbelle
regisgoat
Posted 3:11 AM 6/8/08
They prefer the word "'tard," you know.
regisgoat
switchbladesister
Posted 3:49 AM 6/8/08
one day "developmentally disabled" will also be deemed offensive. And i absolutely put my foot down about "differently abled." Please.
switchbladesister
VitosMom
Posted 3:45 AM 5/8/08
It's not that the "r" word is not politically correct. The tears caused by the "r" word have nothing to do with politics. It is simply mean, humiliating, and degrading. It is used to put down some of the most vulnerable of our society. Can't we treat people with intellectual disabilities civilly, instead of encouraging more bullying which this movie will do?
VitosMom