Directed by: Larry Charles
Starring: Sacha Baron Cohen, Anna Faris, Ben Kingsley, John C. Reilly, Jason Mantzoukas
General Admiral Aladeen (Cohen) is the dictator of a North African nation named Wadiya. He rules with an iron fist, and orders executions on a whim for even minor infractions. There's a funny payoff with this. Aladeen addresses the United Nations over human rights violations and through a series of failed assassination attempts and a coup attempt by Aladeen's right hand man Tahir (Kingsley), he has his beard shaved off and is wandering the streets of Manhattan while an installed body double poses as him.
Aladeen begins working for a health food store owner named Zoey (Faris), who is ideologically opposed in every day to Aladeen (without knowing he is indeed the despised dictator). Do they fall in love? Yes, of course. Does Aladeen change? Kind of, sort of. By the end, he's at least open to the possibility of free elections in Wadiya, you know like the ones in Russia. In between, Cohen and company go for lowbrow verbal gags that make you laugh and sometimes cringe, but there is a zeal to how Cohen delivers his humor. Previous outings like Borat (2006) and Bruno (2009) gave us the same style in which not much was off-limits.
The Dictator actually has something of a plot and isn't just a character wandering the United States and recording his interactions with people in semi-documentary fashion. Cohen's The Dictator is funny, yes, and we find ourselves laughing despite ourselves. Aladeen is the hero, and he's a dictator.