Borat and Hostel: Hilarity and Hostility in America Via Fantasies of Eastern Europe
By Adam Lowenstein
My aim here is to sketch some preliminary connections between two recent films that have won my uncomfortable admiration: Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (Larry Charles, 2006) and Hostel (Eli Roth, 2005). Although Borat is generally understood as a comedy (subgenre: “mockumentary”) and Hostel as a horror film (subgenre: “torture show”), the laughs of Borat border on pain as often as the shocks of Hostel elicit incredulous giggles. Both films have been discussed as excessive, cringe-inducing, taboo-breaking, tasteless, irresponsible – and irresistible, especially for youthful viewers eager for the all-too-rare opportunity to watch a film that garners full-blown theatrical distribution while genuinely pushing the envelope of mainstream audience sensibilities. Both are relatively low-budget American films that became box-office sensations (Hostel’s sequel is due in June 2007, and I’m confident that a stream of Borat clones or borrowers will be with us soon). Both choose to show us an America many Americans would rather not recognize, and both perform this feat by turning to the idea of Eastern Europe as the device that permits American fantasies of the “Other” to become revealing portraits of ourselves.
Borat begins and ends in Borat Sagdiyev’s (Sacha Baron Cohen) home nation of Kazakhstan, but the majority of the film unfolds in America as Borat and his partner Azamat Bagatov (Ken Davitian) travel the country in search of “cultural learnings” to bring home for broadcast on Kazakh television. Hostel takes the opposite tack: two college-age Americans, Paxton (Jay Hernandez) and Josh (Derek Richardson) (temporarily accompanied by a clownish Icelander, Oli [Eythor Gudjonsson]), carouse through Europe, looking for opportunities to get stoned and most of all, to “score” with the “hottest chicks” they can find. In Amsterdam, they meet Alexei (Lubomir Bukovy), who promises them that to find what they seek, they must “go East” – to Bratislava, Slovakia. There, he promises, the beautiful girls simply melt at the sound of an American accent. So off they go, and after an initially disappointing series of first impressions (Slovakia seems like a gray, poor, depopulated, post-industrial wasteland), they come across heaven, just as Alexei promised: a lush hostel much closer to a palace than to the ramshackle venues they are accustomed to, including rooms that must be shared with model-perfect women who seem to crave nothing more than sex with the new guests. But heaven soon deteriorates as Paxton’s friends disappear one by one. He finds what’s left of them in a remote, ruined hulk of a building occupied by the “Elite Hunting Club,” an underground business that charges steep sums for the privilege of killing someone through whatever torture method you wish (American victims are the most pricey, but other nationalities are also available). Paxton finally succumbs to the trap the Elite Hunting Club has set for him and his friends all along, endures awful torture, but eventually escapes and wreaks revenge on the murderer of Josh and Oli.
“Kazakhstan” in Borat serves largely the same function as “Slovakia” in Hostel: not so much actual geopolitical entities as desires for spaces that authorize particular kinds of American fantasy. Eastern Europe is both blank enough and specific enough in the American imagination for Borat to solicit our belief that a naïve Kazakh could wash his face in a toilet bowl, or for Hostel to suggest that a desperate Slovak could kill tourists for a living. But it is precisely our need for these kinds of fantasies, our willingness to indulge them (however briefly), that both films wield as a whiplash effect: instead of revealing Eastern Europe to us, it is America that is revealed to us. Borat’s “Kazakhstan” and Hostel’s “Slovakia” are short-hand for “anything is possible.” And when anything is possible, it’s what is made of those possibilities that unmasks the fantasizing subject, not the fantasized object. In fact, the fuzzier the fantasized object, the better: Borat speaks in a polyglot gobbledygook, while the femmes fatales of Hostel claim Russian, Italian, and Czech heritage.
The vertiginous giddiness of “anything is possible” drives the humor/horror of both films, and injects the anti-Semitic displays of Borat and the homophobic and misogynist displays of Hostel with a queasy, simultaneous obliviousness and awareness. The glee with which these films inhabit the very ignorance they ultimately wish to critique make them equal parts exhilaration and exasperation. It’s a tricky thing to determine when exactly you (never mind the viewer next to you) are laughing with/at the “Running of the Jews” sequence in Borat, or celebrating/bemoaning vicious acts of violence in Hostel. This is because the films understand, sometimes more clearly and sometimes less clearly, that the effectiveness of the critical laugh depends upon the resonance of the uncritical one, that the condemnation of violence depends upon the lingering taste left after experiencing the vicarious pleasures of violence. This is a risky game to play, where critical awareness of hate is earned through becoming complicit with it. There’s always the chance, of course, that the awareness will never arrive. But isn’t it also a risk to not play the game at all, to pretend as if the dangers don’t exist, or to play the game so safely that the dangers become inaccessible to us?
I’ll conclude with snapshots of two overtly political moments in Borat and Hostel in order to suggest the stakes for fantasy in the provocations of these films. In Hostel, Paxton greets the morning after he and Josh “score” with the Eastern European women by turning to his friend and saying, “Mission accomplished.” Naturally, the echoes of President George W. Bush’s words aboard an aircraft carrier during the choreographed spectacle meant to evoke Top Gun (Tony Scott, 1986) as well as signal the (woefully premature) end of the Iraq War ring loudly. What Paxton and Josh do not realize is that if anyone has accomplished a mission, it is their Eastern European lovers – it is they who have succeeded in projecting themselves as perfect embodiments of American fantasy, showing the Americans what they want to see. What viewers see, then, in the fantasy of an American “mission accomplished,” is a profound narcissism that mistakes the Other for our desires of what we want the Other to be. It’s a misconception that reminds us that no matter how far “East” these Americans have traveled, they have never really left home. And of course, it’s a misconception with lethal consequences.
The Iraq War also surfaces in Borat. A memorable visit to an American rodeo climaxes with Borat first winning the audience’s approval while voicing his support for the war on terror and the Iraq War, then facing their jeers when he decides to honor the tune of “The Star-Spangled Banner” but substitute the words of the (fabricated) Kazakh national anthem. Borat, in cowboy hat and American flag shirt, has apparently taken his sense of shared values between the US and Kazakhstan too far. Presumably, the rodeo audience boos him for his inability to respect the American national anthem, but viewers who laugh at Borat’s cluelessness and/or the rodeo audience’s swift change of heart may well find themselves wondering just how inconsistent it really is to cheer one fantasy of national supremacy (the Iraq War) and hiss at another (the Kazakh national anthem). Mission accomplished.
