U.S.A.-holes

Team America takes no prisoners and spares no swear words

A parody of Gerry Anderson marionette shows (such as Thunderbirds and Joe 90), Jerry Bruckheimer action movies and the '80s cartoon-toy line M.A.S.K., Team America: World Police boils down all those ingredients to their essences, starting with the theme song "Americaaa... Fuck yeah!" (scored like Kenny Loggins' "Danger Zone" and sung in director Trey Parker's faux-Michael Bolton voice). Add to that a script laced with obscenities and graphic puppet-on-puppet violence as well; bless the Chiodo brothers, creators of Killer Klowns From Outer Space, for the amazing work they do with the marionettes. The notorious puppet sex scene has been trimmed of scat and male-on-female oral, but everything short of that remains. And that ain't even the half of it; if that sort of thing bothers you, you've been warned.

The action begins in France ("3,635 miles east of America") in a scene that begins with a hilarious fakeout, then proceeds to embody every French stereotype you can imagine, down to a little boy in a sailor suit singing "Frères Jacques" until he bumps into an Osama bin Laden look-alike carrying a suitcase nuke. The second this Arab terrorist appears, imitation Middle Eastern chanting fades up on the soundtrack. Then Team America shows up in star-spangled jumpsuits and takes out the bad guys while also blowing up most of Paris. It soon becomes clear this is standard procedure for them: In every country the team visits, all of which are defined by their geographical distance from America, or, in the case of Panama, from "the real America," they end up inadvertently blowing up all the major national landmarks. Not for nothing is their logo a bald eagle with a globe in its beak.

The plot thickens when Team America needs to infiltrate a terrorist group, so it recruits Gary (voiced, like 80 percent of the characters in the movie, by Trey Parker), a Broadway actor first seen starring in a musical called Lease, in which he performs a song with the refrain "Everyone has AIDS...AIDS, AIDS, AIDS, AIDS, AIDS!" Gary, who vaguely resembles Brad Pitt and speaks with Shatneresque dramatic pauses, is allegedly the world's greatest actor, and thus he will be surgically altered (that is, have brown shoe polish rubbed on his face and bits of hair glued to his chin) in order to infiltrate a Chechen cell based in Cairo. Ultimately, the trail will lead to North Korean despot Kim Jong-il, who sounds like the City Wok restaurant proprietor on South Park and gets the film's one true musical set piece with a number titled "I'm So Ronery."

In a cinematic era in which so-called parody movies tend to simply stage soulless by-the-numbers re-creations of scenes from other familiar movies (David Zucker, Wayans brothers, Shrek: We're looking at you), Parker gets kudos for remembering the best parodies are the ones that lampoon clichés you didn't even realize were clichés before seeing the spoof. No Bruckheimer staple is left unscorched: the hero's hidden childhood trauma (Gary's acting once led to the death of a family member in preposterous fashion), the deadly earnest dialogue ("What reason do you have to believe?" "Sometimes...believing is all we have"), ridiculous top-secret acronyms (the team's talking computer is called I.N.T.E.L.L.I.G.E.N.C.E.) and note-perfect music parodies, including the imitation Diane Warren-Aerosmith power ballad, the patriotic country song that boasts, "Freedom isn't free/No, there's a hefty fuckin' fee," the "Montage" song cribbed from South Park and the imitation Lisa Gerrard score over a scene of tragedy. Scenes of vomiting have become an unfortunate touchstone of many modern action films, and Team America responds with a number that just might outdo The Meaning of Lifeon that score. Meanwhile, Bruckheimer fave Michael Bay gets singled out for particular scorn in a love song about how awful Pearl Harbor was ("I need you like Ben Affleck needs acting school").

Questions have been raised on both sides of the political aisle as to the agenda of Team America, though as with many episodes of South Park, Parker and collaborator Matt Stone have an amazing knack for finding middle ground on controversial issues. Here, they mock right-wing American machismo, self-centeredness and the love of gratuitous destruction; however, they also savage those on the left who automatically take the side of the countries opposing America no matter what, represented onscreen by Alec Baldwin (voice credited to Maurice La Marche, though it was rumored at one point that Baldwin would play himself) and the Film Actors Guild, or F.A.G. (hee hee hee). The Baldwin parody is dead-on, though the depiction of Michael Moore is reduced to obvious fat jokes (one wonders if Stone regrets being in Bowling for Columbine). Other voice talents include radio host Phil Hendrie, video-game voice-over artist Masasa and That's My Bush's Kristen Miller.

Bottom line: It's hilarious, vicious, offensive, thoroughly profane and a joy to watch, just like you'd expect. Be sure to sit through the end credits for a bonus song from Kim Jong-il to Alec Baldwin.

 
 

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