Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls |top| Guide

In the decades since, the film has become a cult object. Its jokes have entered the meme lexicon (“The sacred animal is... a bat?” “The llllllllllllllllllllllllllike of Africa”). It stands as a time capsule of a pre-irony, pre-political-correctness era where a man could talk out of his butt and that was the punchline.

However, the film is not without its problematic elements. The portrayal of African tribes as primitive, warlike, and easily fooled by a white man in a monkey suit is a dated, reductive trope. The film tries to have it both ways: mocking the colonial gaze while still using tribal stereotypes as punchlines. Like many 90s action parodies ( Last Action Hero , True Lies ), When Nature Calls is thick with homoerotic tension that it refuses to acknowledge directly. ace ventura: when nature calls

The —where Ace pretends to be ill to escape the monastery, contorting his body into impossible, parasitic shapes—is a direct homage to the “spider-walk” in The Exorcist , but inverted for laughter. Carrey weaponizes the grotesque, turning disgust into delight. His body is a weapon against dignity. 3. Post-Colonial Satire: The White Fool in Africa Beneath the fart jokes and talking animals lies a surprisingly sharp post-colonial critique. The film is set in a fictional African country, Nibia, and the English-speaking villains (the Wachati and Wachootoo tribes are caricatures, but the real targets are the colonizers). In the decades since, the film has become a cult object