The Dictator
“The Dictator” does for Sacha Baron Cohen what “The Love Guru” did for Mike Myers: Reveal that this sharp comedian is capable of great folly. The movie isn’t bad enough to be a career killer, the way “Guru” forced Myers into hiding. But the latest collaboration between Cohen and director Larry Charles proves the formula they created with “Borat” and then started to milk dry with “Bruno” has finally run out of juice. “The Dictator” is populated entirely by actors (there’s only one brief scene that appears ambush style). The actor plays Admiral General Omar Aladeen, the mad despot of the North African country Wadiya, which is rich with oil and struggling to start a nuclear weapons program. Aladeen agrees to visit the “devil’s nest” of America with his brother (Ben Kingsley) to address the United Nations, but he’s stripped of his power after landing in New York. While plotting a way to regain his throne, he takes a job at an eco-friendly grocery story run by a cheerful activist (Anna Faris), who gradually falls for the unusually blunt foreigner. Like Cohen’s previous films, “The Dictator” exploits racism and xenophobia for laughs, flinging our deep-seated prejudices back in our faces for humor. But the approach isn’t nearly as effective when it’s actors reading lines instead of real people accidentally revealing their own biases. Every genuine laugh and creative gag in “The Dictator” is negated by a cheap or ugly joke – obvious jabs on stereotypes and racism that smack of self-importance, as if Cohen were preaching to us, and radiate a mean-spiritedness that “Borat” and “Bruno” avoided. It’s telling that the biggest laugh in the entire film comes in the opening shot – a title card dedicating the picture to the memory of Kim Jong Il. The rest of “The Dictator,” sadly, has no clothes.
Two arrested on suspicion of stolen motorcycles
While police were outside a residence checking out a stolen motorcycle, another jacked street bike pulled into the driveway last weekend, authorities said.
Tragedy begets triumph
Michelle Mikaelsson sat at the edge of the main pool inside the George F. Haines International Swim Center in Santa Clara, weeping gently.
San Francisco makes new play for Warriors
San Francisco has stepped up its campaign to lure the Golden State Warriors, potentially complicating Oakland’s effort to turn the Coliseum area into a sports and entertainment megaplex with new facilities for its three professional teams.
U.S. comes up short in Olympic bidding
When the 2012 London Olympics begin less than three months from now, it will mark an anniversary that Americans might not want to celebrate.
Divers to search for Sierra
Sheriff’s office plans to send divers into local waterways to search for Sierra LaMar and received some tips in response to Friday night’s airing of a segment on the missing Morgan Hill teen on “America’s Most Wanted.”
Proposed city budget up $1.8M
The city’s recommended budget for the upcoming fiscal year adds nearly $2 million in services and two full-time positions – including one in the police department – and proposes increasing fees for recreation services such as monthly memberships to local facilities.











