Trevor Noah: Where Was I (2023)

Trevor Noah: Where Was I (2023)

PG-13

netflix

Reliably fun and informative stand-up material that doesn't make too much of a statement

6.0

Movie

United States of America
English
Comedy, Documentary
2023
DAVID PAUL MEYER
Trevor Noah
68 min

TLDR

American comedians are really never going to run out of things to joke about, so long as America keeps America-ing.

What it's about

Inspired by his visits around the world, the comedian and former political commentator of The Daily Show takes aim at America's relationship to its history.

The take

For the entirety of Where Was I, Trevor Noah is comfortably in his pocket—speaking to an audience that's clearly familiar with his style and his views (if the respectful silences and occasional cheering are any indication) and branching off into sharing more serious facts between the jokes. And Noah's style is clearly refined, as he speaks clearly and sticks to a coherent structure at all times. But at a certain point his level of comfort here also leads to punchlines that are too easy or unsurprising, with too much focus placed on the kinds of voices and accents he can put on rather than the content of what he's saying. Noah remains a strong entertainer, but when you know how scathing he can get, this feels more like a warmup round.

What stands out

Whether accidental or deliberate, early sections where Noah talks about the importance of facing the darkness of one's past—instead of trying to deny it and sweep it under the rug—can't help but take on greater resonance with genocides happening in the world today. For the purposes of Noah's narrative during the stand-up special, he only really talks about Germany. But there's still an uneasy truth in those details: about how ordinary people from any country today might feel just as guilty in retrospect about the cruelty happening right under their noses. Noah speaks in past tense with regards to Germany, but clearly speaks in present tense for America and the rest of the world.

Comments

Add a comment

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

Breaking the Waves (1996)

Lars von Trier breaks his rules in the tearjerking first film of the Golden Heart trilogy

8.1

The Contestant (2023)

A breakthrough in reality TV reveals the cruel lengths the media is willing to go to in exploiting a person’s misery for entertainment

7.0

Do Not Expect Too Much from the End of the World (2023)

A cynical, but terribly honest portrait of the indignity of modern life

7.9

Cleaners (2019)

A weird and wonderful coming-of-age anthology featuring classic moments in 2000’s Philippine high schools

8.4

Leave the World Behind (2023)

Shyamalan meets Black Mirror in this hugely entertaining, visually inventive apocalyptic thriller with a killer ending

8.2

Hail Satan? (2019)

Forget everything you think you know about the Satanic Temple

8.0

Problemista (2024)

Dark, weird, poignant, and funny, this debut feature by Los Espookys star Julio Torres is a modern parable of the American Dream

8.6

Bray Wyatt: Becoming Immortal (2024)

WWE’s best effort to pay tribute to Windham “Bray Wyatt” Rotunda

8.5

Wind River (2017)

Sicario's screenwriter directs this story of murder in an Indigenous reserve

9.4

Incendies (2011)

Part melodrama, part war thriller, Incendies is gorgeous and heartbreaking from the first scene

9.9

Curated by humans, not algorithms.

agmtw logo

© 2024 agoodmovietowatch, all rights reserved.