New 'Borat' Film Puts Rudy Giuliani in Awkward Bedroom Scene

In the new film by Baron Cohen "Borat Subsequent Moviefilm", which opens this Friday, there is a bedroom scene where you see Donald Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani, with a young woman in a hotel room; Giuliani says he thought it was a serious interview.


In the new film by Baron Cohen "Borat Subsequent Moviefilm," which opens this Friday, there is a bedroom scene where you see Donald Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani, with a young woman in a hotel room; Giuliani says he thought it was a serious interview.


Borat, Sacha Baron Cohen's fictional Kazakh journalist, is back, targeting Holocaust deniers and supporters of President Donald Trump and his lawyer Rudy Giuliani.

The film "Borat Subsequent Moviefilm," which opens Friday on Amazon Prime, follows the British comedian's first hit film of 2006, which grossed $ 260 million, earned him an Oscar nomination and popularized scores of lines from the character. .

Filmed in secret this summer as the United States began to relax its confinement over the coronavirus, the camera follows Baron Cohen interacting with ordinary people and politicians through his clumsy and highly offensive alter ego.

Although the details of the plot are kept secret, it is known that one of the scenes involves Giuliani, who called the police in July after he had a sordid "interview" in a hotel room with an attractive and flirtatious young woman.


 

In the movie, the encounter appears to leave the 76-year-old former New York mayor in a very embarrassing situation, literally trapped with his hands inside his pants.
Rudy Giuliani in New 'Borat' film

In the movie, the encounter appears to leave the 76-year-old former New York mayor in a very embarrassing situation, literally trapped with his hands inside his pants.

Following an obsequious interview for a fake conservative news programme, the pair retreat at her suggestion for a drink to the bedroom of a hotel suite, which is rigged with concealed cameras.

After she removes his microphone, Giuliani, 76, can be seen lying back on the bed, fiddling with his untucked shirt and reaching into his trousers. They are then interrupted by Borat who runs in and says: “She’s 15. She’s too old for you.”

Giuliani, told the New York Post that he thought the meeting would be a serious interview to comment on the Trump administration's efforts to combat the pandemic.

"Only a little later did I realize it was Baron Cohen. I thought of all the people I had previously cheated on and I felt good about myself because he didn't get me," Giuliani told the publication, adding that he was a "fan of some of his movies. "

Giuliani, a close ally of Trump, is the most prominent victim within the president's circle, but he is certainly the only Republican target in this film.

Although the details of the plot are kept secret, it is known that one of the scenes involves Giuliani, who called the police in July after he had a sordid "interview" in a hotel room with an attractive and flirtatious young woman.
Rudy Guiliani thougt it was a serious interview


Baron Cohen described in a recent Time magazine op-ed how he was left in fear for his life after sneaking into a rally on gun rights in Washington state.

The premise of the film is that Borat, disgraced by the events of the prequel, seeks to redeem his name and that of his country by presenting a gift to Vice President Mike Pence, who appears briefly in the film.

The marketing campaign included a parody account of the government of Kazakhstan in which there are messages such as: "We congratulate Trump for squashing the covid that the Democrats gave him" and congratulating Mike Pence, the vice president "Pussygrabber", on his debate reference to recordings of Trump during his past campaign in which he bragged about grabbing women "by the cunt."

Baron Cohen appeared in character Monday night on the Jimmy Kimmel show, taking a "normal Kazakh plague quiz" before conducting an unorthodox physical exam.

Many of Baron Cohen's victims in the film were once again unwitting members of the public.

Multiple subjects from the original film, including a pair of drunken college students, sued the filmmakers for ripping them off into appearing in the film.

This new film has also led to an appeal in court for the testimony of a Holocaust survivor, who passed away in the summer shortly after speaking with Borat and the production of a fake documentary.

Judith Dim Evans appears in the film to lecture Borat about the Holocaust and is presented in a positive light.

But her daughter sued because her mother didn't want to be included in a comedy dealing with the Holocaust.

"Upon learning, after giving the interview, that the film was actually a comedy designed to make fun of the Holocaust and Jewish culture, Ms Evans was horrified and upset," reads the appeal.

Baron Cohen, who is Jewish, is an outspoken critic of anti-Semitism and conspiracy theories and especially of their spread on social media.

The scene from Sacha Baron Cohen's Borat sequel film that was released in full on Friday, shows Rudy Giuliani in a compromising position in a New York City hotel room alongside a young woman posing as a conservative TV reporter:
 

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