An American Carol

"Laugh like your country depends on it."

Politically charged comedy from David Zucker (of Airplane!, Top Secret, etc.) about the conspicuously-named Michael Malone (Kevin Farley), a bitter documentary filmmaker who is disgusted with the United States of America and decides to start up a campaign to ban the Fourth of July holiday. The night before the big anti-July 4th rally, President John F. Kennedy returns from the dead to tell the filmmaker that he will be visited by three patriotic spirits who will attempt to get him to see the error of his ways.

Draws a great deal from Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol, obviously.

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"Mohammed: It is getting harder and harder to find good suicide bombers...and all the really good ones are gone."
 * Action Survivor: Michael. One minute, he's eating a hoagie. The next, he's fighting off zombies with a shotgun.
 * Adult Child: Michael is primarily this.
 * An Aesop
 * Author Avatar: is "sort of" this to David Zucker. After 9/11, Zucker began rethinking his leftist political beliefs and ultimately became a conservative.
 * Berserk Button: Michael, who generally hates guns, fires some buckshot into an approaching wave of zombie lawyers after he thinks he overhears one of them calling him "fat."
 * Big Bad: Aziz
 * Billing Displacement
 * Black Comedy:
 * Everything from where we first meet the terrorists to where the focus shifts to Michael.


 * It arguably peaks with the suicide bomber training video.
 * The alternate future where
 * Butt Monkey: Michael and Mohammed
 * The Cameo: Bill O'Reilly, Gary Coleman, the list goes on.
 * Children Are Innocent: Very much subverted.
 * Fat Idiot: Michael
 * Freudian Excuse: Michael
 * Heel Face Turn: Michael (hey, based on Scrooge, shouldn't be surprised). Also
 * It should be pointed out that Michael is not "evil"; he's just misguided and blinded by self-importance. The movie makes very clear that, whatever his other faults, he does not approve of honor killings, his feelings of (token) sympathy for Muslims notwithstanding.
 * Hot for Student: Parodied in the college professor scene.
 * Innocent Innuendo:.
 * Large Ham: Michael Malone.
 * Lovable Coward: Ahmed and Mohammed
 * Minion with an F In Evil: Ahmed and Mohammed.
 * Mood Whiplash: The film briefly contemplates 9/11 and, appropriately, drops all the levity until the next scene
 * The Narrator: Leslie Nielsen
 * Not Screened for Critics: But still a good movie.
 * One-Scene Wonder: Jon Voight as George Washington
 * Paper-Thin Disguise: Aziz takes this trope Up to Eleven. Seriously, this is very-possibly the most exreme use of this trope mankind will ever witness. His disguise consists of
 * Poor Man's Substitute: Kevin Farley bears a very strong resemblance to his dearly departed brother Chris.
 * Rapid-Fire Comedy: Remember, this is David Zucker we're talking about.
 * Rule of Funny: Women in the past, slapping Michael, despite being completely unaware of his presence.
 * Running Gag: Whenever somebody asks if Michael is filmmaker, they will inevitably be corrected that he's just a documentary maker and will no longer be impressed.
 * Screams Like a Little Girl: Mohammed
 * Screw This, I'm Outta Here:.
 * Strawman Political: Excessively so.
 * Take That
 * Those Two Guys: Ahmed and Mohammed
 * Timeshifted Actor
 * The Undead
 * Unlucky Childhood Friend
 * Unreliable Narrator: Not so much an unreliable narrator as an easily-distracted narrator marching slowly toward senility.
 * Unwitting Pawn:.
 * Unreliable Narrator: Not so much an unreliable narrator as an easily-distracted narrator marching slowly toward senility.
 * Unwitting Pawn:.