This
astonishing documentary--from the team behind the equally
entertaining American Movie--follows the exploits of two
guys who are equal parts practical jokers, performance artists
and political activists.
Bichlbaum
and Bonanno's early activities included challenging gender
stereotypes by adding gay musclemen in the background of
the macho videogame SIM Copter, and swapping voice-boxes
between talking Barbie dolls and GI Joes. Their singular
purpose is "identity correction", stealing an
identity and presenting a more honest face. So it's hardly
surprising that their next target was George W Bush, who
during his first campaign hypocritically claimed to be the
"environmental governor" even though during his
years in office Texas became the most polluted state in
the nation. The kids loved the Barbie-GI Joe thing, but
in response to the Yes Men's antics, Bush replied, "There
ought to be limits to freedom." Even though their spoof
Bush website merely told the truth.
This
film follows their parody of the World Trade Organisation,
including conference and TV appearances where they present
what the WTO would say if they were being honest. Namely
the fact that the organisation, originally established to
help poor countries, is actually exploiting them and sending
profits back to American corporations. (The world's poorest
countries lose 14 times more money due to unjust WTO policies
than they receive in aid from the West.)
Bichlbaum
and Bonanno's approach is so bone-dry that most audience
members don't get the joke, no matter how absurd they get--from
a gold lame business-leisure suit for monitoring sweatshop
workers to the "re-burger", a gruesome third-world
starvation solution. They make their point with a combination
of wit and passion, simply by highlighting the upside-down
world we live in.
The
film has a gripping narrative structure, following Bichlbaum
and Bonanno from New York to Paris to Finland to London
to Australia--a series of increasingly daring appearances.
The filmmakers tell the story with razor-sharp photography
and editing that focuses on the central characters and lets
them express the important issues without forcing the point
at all. The result is bracingly engaging--simply because
Bichlbaum and Bonanno are so likeable, hilarious, smart
and provocative. Essential.
The
Yes Men Directed By:
Dan Ollman, Sarah Price, Chris Smith
The Yes Men Cast:
Andy Bichlbaum, Mike Bonanno, Barry Coates, Sal Salamone,
Patrick Lichty, Matt McElligott, Michael Moore, Snafu,
Richard Robbins, Ryan McKinley, Laura Nix, Bob Ostertag