Borat's Larry Charles sounds pretty disappointed in Sacha Baron Cohen
"He was surrounding himself with more traditional show business people… which I don’t think was good advice for the kind of rebel sensibility that Sacha had had up until that time."
Larry Charles, Photo: Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images
Larry Charles’ filmography includes collaborations with some of the biggest names in comedy: Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David, Sacha Baron Cohen, and, most recently, the cast and creators of his silly and provocative Dicks: The Musical. (Also the Dilbert guy, but hey, nobody’s perfect.) Charles has just published a new memoir, Comedy Samurai, about his long experience in the world of making funny films, which means he’s currently out on the promotional tour. Which means, in turn, that he’s getting pretty candid about old friends and collaborators he no longer speaks with—notably Cohen and David, both of whom he’s become estranged from after projects with the two men failed to meet lofty expectations.
This is per a new Daily Beast interview Charles gave this week, in which he talked about falling out with Cohen, specifically, during the course of the filming of their third movie together, 2012’s The Dictator. Charles—who makes it clear that he holds himself just as responsible for any ill feeling as anybody else—suggests that, by that point in his Hollywood ascent, Cohen had lost some of the renegade spirit that had powered the pair’s earlier Borat and Brüno. The director notes he entered their latest (and first traditionally scripted) project with high hopes, saying he envisioned it as “a classic political satire on the level of a Dr. Strangelove.” But, “I think that for a variety of reasons, Sacha didn’t focus on the work the way he had in the other two movies and got distracted. And also started to take on a lot of input from outside people. And I felt like he was groping and flailing, trying to find the answers when the answers were within him. And I would try to get him to trust himself, trust his instincts, which I’ve learned is the only thing you have. And instead, he was trusting so many different people with so many different contradictory thoughts that it started to just unravel and issues arose that should never have been issues.”