We're told she's 'controversial,' but honestly, all she does is lob obvious cheap shots that do nothing but sanction her audience's status quo. Where's the controversy in that?
Margaret Cho - Assassin (2005)
Runtime: 85 mins
Synopsis: The incomparable Margaret Cho roars back onto the screen with her latest concert, The Assassin Tour, recorded live in May of 2005 at the Warner Theater in Washington D.C. Uproariously funny, poignant and scathing, this is one event movie you won't want to miss! Assassin features fresh... The incomparable Margaret Cho roars back onto the screen with her latest concert, The Assassin Tour, recorded live in May of 2005 at the Warner Theater in Washington D.C. Uproariously funny, poignant and scathing, this is one event movie you won't want to miss! Assassin features fresh doses of Cho's always ground-breaking, controversial and hilarious brand of humor from her critically acclaimed, State of Emergency Tour. Says Margaret, "It's a raw interpretation of what's happening daily in our ever-evolving or devolving state of the union." Margaret's experience starring in her own network sit-com was chronicled in her 1999 Off-Broadway show, I'm the One That I Want. That movie ended up making more money per print than any movie in history. It was also adapted into a best-selling autobiography, followed by two more groundbreaking concert tours, Notorious C.H.O. and Revolution, each generating more ticket and DVD sales than its predecessor. As a performer she has never failed to entertain and engage, and as a human rights activist she has never let her voice be silenced. A portion of here! Films' share of the box office revenue from this theatrical run will be donated directly to the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. -- © Regent Releasing [More]
Genre: Comedies
Starring: Margaret Cho
DVD Info
Release:
Aug 11, 2005
DVD Features:
- Region (unknown)
- Keep Case
- Widescreen
Audio:
- Surround Sound 5.1 English
Additional Release Material:
- Additional Footage - Opening Act: Bruce Daniels
- Bonus Short - 1. ODE TO MARGARET CHO
- 2. INVISIBLE SON
- Featurette - 1. BELLY DANCING Segment
- Making of - THE MAKING OF ASSASSIN - Inside The Mind Of Margaret Cho
- Music Video - Animated Rap Video by MCMC
Text/Photo Gallery:
- Photo Gallery
Reviews
You know, the surest way to stop being considered 'edgy' is to brag constantly about how edgy you are. Get over yourself and get back to writing good jokes.
I saw Cho perform much of this material live [...] and found it bracingly hilarious. The movie she has made of it is an entirely different matter.
Pointed sociopolitical commentary that's thoughtful and impassioned, if not always hilarious.
standard-issue platitudes about media hype and Republican hypocrisy that you’ve likely heard many times before from many others.
Anger is the gasoline of stand-up comedians, the fuel that gets them revved. But just as too much gas will flood a carburetor, an overdose of anger can stall a comic's inspiration.
Inspiration is running thin in comedian Margaret Cho's fourth concert film, a routine stand-up set that compares poorly to her oft-hilarious first two.
If Margaret Cho's act shows no signs of getting old, it's because the world is kind enough to provide her with sufficient lunacy to fill countless concert tours.
Her savage but empowering take on gay life is sufficiently sidesplitting to smooth over the weaker spots.
Much of this feels like pandering to her liberal audience, as she approaches subjects like reproductive and gay rights without offering many new -- or funny -- observations.
Though Cho occasionally connects with her targets, more often than not she seems as intolerant and hate-filled as she accuses them of being -- and that's not funny.
Ms. Cho's commentaries come across as mere rants, lacking the fresh comedic spin necessary to carry a concert film.
Not as personal as some of her previous tours, focusing instead on social commentary about today's headlines, but she still manages to get in some great lines.
Soft in the middle, and none of Cho’s stories here take on an epic scope....[Yet] the comedienne remains endearingly naughty.
[Cho] redoubles her invectives against the religious and political right with a fearlessness that is breathtaking.
A terrific mime with amazing expressiveness, Cho has a fertile, untrammeled imagination that shapes vignettes and one-liners that unfailingly hit their intended targets.


Top Critic