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Fast forward to 2025, and it’s easy to feel like the world has its share of absurdities. If you’re in the mood for a comedic take on a ludicrous future, “Idiocracy” might just hit the spot. This sci-fi comedy, now available on Netflix, offers a satirical glimpse into a hilariously dysfunctional world.
To provide some background, “Idiocracy” was penned by Etan Cohen and directed by the renowned satirist Mike Judge. Released in 2006 and based on a story by Cohen, the film’s narrative is intriguing, but the production itself faced some unusual challenges. The movie, which boldly critiques capitalism and big corporations, was met with hesitance from its studio, 20th Century Fox. As a result, “Idiocracy” received limited promotion and was notably absent from critical screenings, a rarity that fueled speculation. In 2018, Terry Crews, who portrays the fictional U.S. president in the film, suggested that the portrayal of corporations might have been a sticking point.
Crews elaborated on this idea during a GQ career retrospective. He remarked, “The rumor was that because we used real corporations in our comedy,” referring to the film’s strange release and its box office flop. He explained that Fox, which owned the movie, decided to limit its release to the bare minimum required, leading to a brief theater run before it vanished from cinemas. Although Crews’s description was metaphorical, his point was clear.
Despite its rocky start, “Idiocracy” has since garnered a cult following, and as mentioned, it’s currently streaming on Netflix. So what’s the premise of this film?
The film begins with Corporal Joe Bauers, played by Luke Wilson, in 2005. He’s chosen for his utterly average characteristics as part of a military experiment in suspended animation, essentially freezing him in time. Needing a female counterpart, the project pairs him with Rita, a sex worker portrayed by Maya Rudolph, who is involuntarily included in the experiment. Due to bureaucratic mishaps at the facility, they’re forgotten for 500 years. Their awakening in 2505 is triggered by an event dubbed a “garbage avalanche,” thrusting them into a chaotic future Washington D.C.
What happens in Idiocracy?
Let’s talk about what actually happens in “Idiocracy” now that we’ve been over the film’s famously troubled release. We first meet Corporal Joe Bauers (Luke Wilson) in the year 2005, where he’s selected as the most average guy in the entire military (unflattering, to be sure) and placed in a suspended animation sequence, basically meaning he’ll be frozen in time. Because he needs a female companion, Rita (Maya Rudolph), a sex worker, is essentially kidnapped and put into suspended animation with Joe. Unbeknownst to both of them, petty squabbling at the facility where Joe and Rita are, for lack of a better term, stored leads to the closure of the military base, and everyone forgets about the pair … until 500 years pass, and the two wake up in a disheleved Washington D.C. in 2505 (they’re only even roused because something called a “garbage avalanche” literally shakes them out of the suspended animation).Â
Awake and horrified at what the world has become — a world that prioritizes and centers its dumbest citizens — Joe and Rita team up with idiot Frito Pendejo (Dax Shephard) after they accidentally arise from the “dead” in his apartment. Though Joe accidentally runs afoul of authorities, an incredible score on an aptitude tests captures the attention of this world’s president, Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho (Terry Crews). Still, Joe is determined to stop the “dumbing-down” of all humanity and, using a time machine, is able to at least reverse course away from this unsettling future … although it should be said that a president constantly noting that the White House is sponsored by fast food chain Carl’s Jr. does feel feasible in 2025.
If you like Idiocracy, its director made another classic satire
Part of the reason that the bizarre rollout of “Idiocracy” was so confusing for frequent moviegoers is because director Mike Judge was already a confirmed box office draw at this point — thanks in large part to the success of his biting workplace comedy “Office Space.” In 1999, the film — written and directed by Judge and also released by 20th Century Fox — hit theaters and became a modest box office success but, more importantly, earned its place in cinematic history as one of the greatest and most honest movies about dead-end jobs.
Our entry into the world of “Office Space” is Peter Gibbons (a spectacularly well-cast Ron Livingston), who works an unsatisfying and even infuriating job as a programmer at a fictional company called Initech alongside his two friends Samir Nagheenanajar (Ajay Naidu) and Michael Bolton (David Herman). After Peter goes to see a hypnotherapist with his controlling girlfriend Anne (Alexandra Wentworth) and watches the therapist die in front of him, he realizes precisely how futile and stupid his days at Initech are. Not only does he start acting out at work — aggravating his boss Bill Lumbergh (Gary Cole) and weirdly impressing the two Bobs (John C. McGinley and Paul Willson) who are brought in to downsize Initech, but Peter, Samir, and Michael even come up with a plan to steal money from the company so they can finally quit. Oh, and along the way, Peter strikes up a romantic connection with local waitress Joanna (Jennifer Aniston), and while all of this is happening, poor Milton Waddams (venerated character actor Stephen Root) really, really wants his stapler back.
If you love “Office Space,” definitely check out “Idiocracy” on Netflix — and ignore any eerie real-life parallels, if you can.