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Brüno 's Over-the-Top Deleted Scene

Sacha Baron Cohen's Brüno is intended to raise eyebrows. But the most shocking scene of all was axed in test screenings. Out director Richard Bay saw the film with that scene in place -- and he was not amused.



Some scenes in Sacha Baron Cohen's Brüno are intended to raise eyebrows and provoke a strong response. But the most shocking scene of all was axed before the film hit theaters.

Spoiler alert: The title character Brüno is a hyper-gay exaggeration who looks for fame in Los Angeles after his excommunication from the fashion world of his native Austria. The search for fame proves as difficult as capturing a spotlight swirling over Hollywood Boulevard, but he does find love in his assistant.

In a cage.

In a cage match.

In a cage match in Arkansas, before an angry crowd that would rather see two men tear each other apart than engage in a gay make-out session. From there, the movie cuts in a different direction, but original versions allegedly included a violent reaction from the crowd that left the two new lovers bloodied and disabled from a wincing gay bash.

The two later announce their marriage in a press conference, but only Brüno speaks. His fiancé looks brain-dead -- drooling on himself in his wheelchair.

The scene is played for laughs…and got them, Movieline.com reports .

Voicing his discomfort with the original ending, writer-director Richard Day ( Arrested Development, Ellen ) said that others in the audience of a screening he attended back in January defended it. Day and actor Jack Plotnick were the only known gay members of the crowd, the director said.

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Reader Comments
  • Name: garychapelhill
    Date posted: 7/12/2009 9:54:00 PM
    Hometown: chapel hill, nc

    Comment:

    haven't any of these "critics" ever seen a John Waters' movie??? Desperate Living makes Bruno look like a Disney flick. I wish the Advocate was as worried about the homobigotry coming from the White House as they seem to be about this movie. I saw it and what struck me more than anything is the fact that the majority of people in this country are more desensitized to extreme violence then they are to two men kissing. Bruno proves that proclamations of our acceptance by the larger culture (as those who come in here to tell us to stop whining) are greatly exaggerated. Homobigotry is not going away. It is on the rise. and when a love scene between two men can start a riot, we need our civil rights, guaranteed by law, now more than ever.

  • Name: Adrián Párraga
    Date posted: 7/10/2009 9:24:00 PM
    Hometown: Cochabamba

    Comment:

    Oh my God! It's Perez Hilton! (Mind you, with a more intellectual edge than the Real Lavandeira)

  • Name: Jaime Starr
    Date posted: 7/10/2009 1:06:00 PM
    Hometown: Minneapolis, MN

    Comment:

    Okay, let's loosen up here just a bit. This film is just for entertainment value. People should be able to make fun of themselves, no matter what your sexuality may be. If your not interested in seeing the film, then don't. It's just a film, if the the general public takes it very seriously, then the point of the film has been missed. Once again, it's a movie, don't overanalyze it! PEACELOVE&BWILD!

  • Name: Tim and Earl
    Date posted: 7/10/2009 9:28:00 AM
    Hometown: Easton, PA

    Comment:

    We queers have been the laffing stock for eons, why would this movie not sell? What's funny though is that my husband Earl and I are not laffing anymore, it's too old of a joke (5,000 years or more?). Tim

  • Name: Jonathan
    Date posted: 7/10/2009 8:27:00 AM
    Hometown: Duluth, Minnesota

    Comment:

    I've always believed that gay people are liars down to the core: from the 'prep schools I went to' to 'how much money my family has' to 'how great my life is', these comments about how funny this movie will be and 'hey, I laugh at it too!'. I doubt that very much. It's all cover for being in deep pain that you've never dealt with and don't want to appear unsophisticated or hyper-sensitive. This kind of comedy is not targeted to urban liberals - it's directed towards teenage boys, small minded men and women and anyone else who thinks that we aren't even human. I know of no other minority group who hates its own members as much as we do.

  • Name: Rob
    Date posted: 7/10/2009 7:35:00 AM
    Hometown: Tempe

    Comment:

    Ugh... seriously, let's get comical for once.... everyone is waiting for this movie to come out. Gays are in the mainstream, it isn't an underground culture anymore. Enjoy the cameras, enjoy the spotlight, and wait for how people react to it. The beauty of SBC's characters isn't the "idiotic" things that he does, its' the candid nature of his movies. The humor is in watching how people react to situations he places them in. Go watch Borat... Go watch Da Ali G Show.... But in all seriousness... when you have to explain to people what the joke is, its no longer funny... thanks for ruining it.

  • Name: Jeff
    Date posted: 7/9/2009 11:41:00 PM
    Hometown: Denver

    Comment:

    It has been my small experience in the film industry that gay men & women will go out of their way to screw each other over, while kissing the ass of straight "players" in the business. All for the hope of that next big paycheck. Then they are shocked at crap like "Borat". The paying gay public should start demanding better from our own in the industry. Like some quality original drama from LOGO, no. 1 It takes two to tango. Straight people are never going to produce any quality product on a consistant basis if we just sit and smile at every offensive joke, comment, and movie that is served to us just to keep a job. "Borat" is the worst kind of minstrel show. Shame on you.

  • Name: Brad Bailey
    Date posted: 7/9/2009 11:05:00 PM
    Hometown: Fayetteville, Arkansas

    Comment:

    The last time Cohen came to Arkansas in the Bruno character, a redneck at a gun show threatened to knock out all of his teeth if he said another word. It wouldn't surprise me at all if he was actually bloodied by the locals in the cage-fighting scene.

  • Name: Jack
    Date posted: 7/9/2009 8:11:00 PM
    Hometown: Los Angeles

    Comment:

    I don't think the laughs are at the gay community. The laughs are at this insane over-the-top character. It's a character who happens to be gay. The mistake we make when making this kind of commentary is to assume that people will think that a ridiculously exaggerated character and a group he falls into are one and the same. It's like assuming all women are as idiotic as Sarah Palin. When people laugh at her, they're not laughing at women, they're laughing at her lunacy. See? Same deal.

  • Name: John H
    Date posted: 7/9/2009 6:02:00 PM
    Hometown: Orono, ME

    Comment:

    I have made no plans to see this movie. This is not some Huck Finn-esque attempt to expose prejudice in America. The person quoted in the article is exactly right; the laughs coming from the audience are at gay people, not homophobia. And besides, even if it was satire, the intended audience wouldn't smart enough to recognize it.



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