Index Of Tropic Thunder File
| Character (Actor) | Archetype | Satirical Target | |------------------|-----------|------------------| | Tugg Speedman (Ben Stiller) | Action hero turned dramatic actor | 1980s–90s stars (Schwarzenegger, Stallone); pretentious method acting | | Kirk Lazarus (Robert Downey Jr.) | Australian method actor playing a Black soldier | White actors playing minority roles (e.g., Laurence Olivier in Othello); Stanislavski extremism | | Jeff Portnoy (Jack Black) | Crude comedy star addicted to drugs | Eddie Murphy / Fat Albert–style bodily humor; Adam Sandler cohort | | Alpa Chino (Brandon T. Jackson) | Gay rapper hiding sexuality; endorser of “Booty Sweat” energy drink | Hip-hop commercialization; closeted celebrities | | Les Grossman (Tom Cruise) | Vulgar, power-mad studio executive | Real producers (Scott Rudin, Harvey Weinstein) | | Four Leaf Tayback (Nick Nolte) | Grizzled Vietnam vet author | Real veterans turned consultants (e.g., Dale Dye) |
The film famously opens with three fake trailers:
| Fake Film | Starring | Genre Parody | |-----------|----------|----------------| | Satan’s Alley | Kirk Lazarus (Downey) and Tobey Maguire (cameo) | Period gay drama / religious epic | | The Fattest, Furiousest | Jeff Portnoy (Black) | Eddie Murphy-style multiple-role comedy | | Scorcher VI: Global Meltdown | Tugg Speedman (Stiller) | Over-the-top action sequel | index of tropic thunder
Additionally mentioned:
Upon release, Tropic Thunder sparked significant conversation regarding its boundaries of comedy. | Character (Actor) | Archetype | Satirical Target
A group of pampered Hollywood actors attempt to make a big-budget war movie but are forced to become the soldiers they are portraying when they are dropped into a real-life conflict zone in the Golden Triangle of Southeast Asia.
Tropic Thunder is a satirical action comedy directed by and starring Ben Stiller, co-starring Jack Black, Robert Downey Jr., Steve Coogan, Jay Baruchel, Danny McBride, and Nick Nolte, with notable cameos by Tom Cruise and Matthew McConaughey. The film parodies war movies, Hollywood ego, method acting, and the film industry itself. The film famously opens with three fake trailers:
Below is a comprehensive index of key content related to the film, including home media releases, special features, soundtrack listings, and notable in-film fictional elements.