Ben Stiller Has ‘No Apologies’ for Controversial 2008 Comedy ‘Tropic Thunder’

Stiller, who's currently hard at work on the second season of 'Severance,' has again addressed the occasionally revived controversies of 'Tropic Thunder.'

Ben Stiller on Tropic Thunder red carpet
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Image via Getty/Andreas Rentz

Ben Stiller on Tropic Thunder red carpet

Ben Stiller says he has “no apologies” for his satirical 2008 hit Tropic Thunder.

For those unfamiliar, the critically acclaimed film—directed and co-written by Stiller, who also starred—takes a comedic look at the extreme lengths actors and others in the industry will go to as part of a larger effort to achieve fame, acclaim, or something more or less in between the two.

In the years since its release, Tropic Thunder has sporadically popped back up as a conversation topic, including by way of occasionally disingenuous attempts at excerpting elements of the film with the hopes of propping up increasingly tired talks of “cancel culture.”

This appeared to be the case on Twitter in recent days, with Stiller himself shutting down the incorrect assertion that he had been “apologizing for doing this movie.” As seen below, Stiller’s stance is actually the opposite.

“I make no apologies for Tropic Thunder,” he said on Tuesday. “Don’t know who told you that. It’s always been a controversial movie since when we opened. Proud of it and the work everyone did on it.”

Stiller has made similar comments in the past, including on Twitter.

Ben Stiller is seen talking Thunder on Twitter

Others involved with the film have also similarly spoken out in the past, including Robert Downey Jr., whose character (fictional method actor Kirk Lazarus) undergoes a surgical procedure to darken his skin to portray Black army sergeant Lincoln Osiris.

During a 2020 appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast, Downey addressed the criticism that has been made about this being an example of blackface; for some who criticized the film, for example, it was argued that it didn’t matter what intended purpose the presence of blackface served in the film. (In Tropic Thunder, specifically, the character’s decision to don blackface to portray a Black man is itself the source of mockery as part of a larger story about blindly ego-driven actors).

“I think having a moral psychology is job one,” Downey said at the time. “Sometimes, you just gotta go, ‘Yeah I effed up.’ In my defense, Tropic Thunder is about how wrong [blackface] is, so I take exception.”

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The Tropic Thunder universe may soon grow to include a deeper dive into Tom Cruise’s character, fictional film exec Les Grossman. As of last August, a standalone movie featuring Grossman was said to be in the mix for Cruise and his frequent collaborator Christopher McQuarrie.

As for Stiller, he’s currently working on the second season of his widely praised Apple TV+ drama Severance.

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