Borat Subsequent Moviefilm

Borat Subsequent Moviefilm(2020)

R
10/23/2020 (US)Comedy1h 36m
6.4

"Wear mask. Save live."

Overview

14 years after making a film about his journey across the USA, Borat risks life and limb when he returns to the United States with his young daughter, and reveals more about the culture, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the political elections.

Jena Friedman

Screenplay

Anthony Hines

Story

Peter Baynham

Screenplay

Dan Swimer

Story

Dan Swimer

Screenplay

Erica Rivinoja

Screenplay

Dan Mazer

Screenplay

Sacha Baron Cohen

Screenplay

Sacha Baron Cohen

Story

Anthony Hines

Screenplay

Nina Pedrad

Story

Lee Kern

Screenplay

Sacha Baron Cohen

Characters

Jason Woliner

Director

Where to Watch

Stream

Amazon Prime Video
Amazon Prime Video with Ads

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Part of the Borat Moviefilms Collection

A collection of movies that follow the misadventures of a fictitious Kazakh journalist, named Borat Sagdiyev, who travels through the United States to make documentaries, which feature real-life interactions with unsuspecting Americans.

Media

Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Trailer

Borat and Alexa Start a Weird Romance | Borat Supplemental Reportings

Borat and Alexa Start a Weird Romance | Borat Supplemental Reportings

Clip

Tutar Accidentally Eats a Baby and Wants to Keep It

Tutar Accidentally Eats a Baby and Wants to Keep It

Clip

Q&A with Borat (Internet Presentation)

Q&A with Borat (Internet Presentation)

Featurette

Borat Learns About The 'Dangers Of The Democrats'

Borat Learns About The 'Dangers Of The Democrats'

Clip

Borat Is Back

Borat Is Back

Teaser

Social

R
A review by Repo Jack
8.0

Written on October 26, 2020

I'm generally not a comedy guy. I did see the first Borat and found it to be a hodge-podge of prank sketches with some very funny gags.

Sacha Baron Cohan's follow-up improves over the original with a more story-based approach that still upends the '-isms" in America (racism, sexism, etc.) in the midst of a freaking pandemic. It couldn't be more well-timed in this brutal election season.

The standout is Borat's 15 year old daughter played by Maria Bakalova (she's actually 24) who steals the show with her cluelessness and likeability.

How well you enjoy this movie will depend on your own level of political ideology and tolerance to very crude and crass behavior. Personally, I found it hilarious. But it is definitely not for everybody.