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Joe: Looks like
one of the terrorists are trying to tell us something.
Gary: It's Me! It's Me!
Joe: Looks like he's saying "Kiss Me! Kiss Me!"
Chris: Smart ass motherfucker!
Trey Parker and
Matt Stone once explained in an episode of Charlie Rose that they’d
never reveal their religious or political affiliations, because they
didn’t want to alienate their audience. But “Team America” is an
indictment of literally every issue under the sun, from Hollywood, to
the government, to Bruckheimer films, right down to crappy shows like
RENT. “Team America” is at its best though when it spoofs not only
Bruckheimer’s insanely over the top films, but when it spoofs blind
patriotism. Parker and Stone’s film is also funniest when jabbing at
Hollywood liberalism portraying many of the Hollywood liberal elite as
numb-skulled, elitist morons whom are fooled in to a false plan by the
hilariously spoofed Kim Jong Il.
But when it isn’t
trying to make a political statement, it sure is a lot of fun. Mostly
with its portrayals of its heroes as beefed up, cocky, ignoramuses who
go head first into a situation and do more harm than good. The original
plan for “Team America” was to remake the really bad “Armageddon” but
with puppets, but Parker and Stone really create a much better film by
spoofing Bruckheimer, and they do it in the most deadpan sense. Whether
it’s the terrorists speaking in an odd blather, or the heroes shouting
idiotic statements to one another, “Team America” is pretty damn fun.
And Parker and Stone delight in giving us truly funny one-liners that
will leave its audience quoting it to one another for days. “Team
America” starts off with a bang and manages to make its message known
loud and clear.
“Team America” in all its well-intentioned spoofing is never as clever
as it thinks it is. Parker and Stone in all their abilities and
resources, never look as innovational and ahead of their time as they
think they do. With a weekly show in which they spoof anything and
everything under the sun, it’s hard to tackle anything fresh or new, so
“Team America” really just treads over old material. Spoofing the idiocy
of RENT, Michael Moore, and Right Wingers? Been done. Most of the jokes
in “Team America” are really just hit and miss; especially the
“political satire”, which often fell flat.
Whether it’s the RENT spoof with the song “Everyone has AIDS”, to a
musical montage about how freedom isn’t free, and the Film Actor’s Guild
being spelled F.A.G., the jokes just feel flat because they feel
re-fried by the very guys who take such delight in doling them out week
after week. “Team America” is often funny, just not as funny as it makes
itself out to be from the beginning. Their film is not based around
Parker and Stone picking on every issue and showing its stupidity, their
film is really just two people with a carte blanche on issues that they
try to tackle in such a short amount of time. It’s not about whom they
want to attack and putting them in their places, but how many people
they can attack as possible in the running time, only for the mere shock
effect.
I expected much
more from Stone and Parker, I have to admit. “Team America” while
entertaining, really thinks it’s leading the pack in terms of jabs at
politics and Hollywood. When it’s not beating us over the head with
“clever political satire”, it can be a fun film.

- The very first
footage screened for Paramount executives was of a poorly crafted
puppet in front of a background of a badly drawn Eiffel Tower,
prompting one executive in the audience to yell. "Oh god, they
fucked us!" This was a prank pulled by the directors and the shot
then pans over to a beautiful Parisian landscape with much better
looking puppets.
- Sean Penn was so
insulted by his portrayal in the film, that he wrote an angry letter
to Matt Stone and Trey Parker about it. The letter was latter
published by several Newspapers and Magazines.
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