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By Kev Geoghegan Entertainment reporter, BBC News
Chris Rock, it would seem, is a fan of all things British.
In 2008, the US comedian set a new record for playing in front of the largest
audience in the UK, performing to a crowd of 15,900 fans at London's O2 arena
in the first of two shows.
Then, Rock joked about US presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama,
telling the audience: "He looks so young, every time I see Barack I say, 'So
when you getting back with New Edition?'," a reference to Bobby Brown's 80s'
boy band.
Now, two years on, Obama has marked his first year in office and Rock has taken
the British independent film Death At A Funeral and moved the action from rural
England to southern California and a predominantly black cast.
"He's even more fair game now," laughs Rock at the film's UK press junket in
London.
"It's still hard to do jokes about him because he's so damn cool," Rock
explains of the US president, of whose campaign Rock was a fierce supporter.
"Normally, presidents aren't cool but he's the coolest guy in any room he's in.
It's like making jokes about Brad Pitt, like, 'Yeah your wife's hot'... it's
not really a joke."
Controversial
In 2008, Obama even paid Rock the ultimate compliment, paraphrasing one of his
most famous and controversial comedy routines.
The segment, Niggas vs. Black People, sees Rock discuss the negative stereotype
of the black urban male and his detrimental effect on the African American
community.
Continue reading the main story
I don't think I've ever done a show where people didn't boo at some point
It earned Rock no small amount of harsh criticism when first broadcast on a
1996 television special, particularly from some black organisations who
objected to Rock's use of the "N-word".
But Rock insists comedy is about more than just cheap gags and making people
think is one of his priorities
"There's nothing like upsetting people, throwing a topic out there and then
bringing it back and they go, 'Oh, okay that's what he meant by that. I thought
he was really against us but he's really for us'.
"You got to keep stuff in and a show like that is much better than laugh, laugh
laugh."
The US comedian describes himself as a "big fan" of Ricky Gervais - also no
stranger to criticism of his material.
Rock supports the British comedian's defence that he won't act as a
self-censor.
Chris Rock hosts the 2005 Academy Awards Rock brought his controversial comedy
style to the Oscars as host in 2005
"The audience will let you know," he says. "I always look at the show, not joke
to joke but the show as a whole.
"I want people to feel all sorts of emotions, I want them to laugh, I want them
to think. I don't think I've ever done a show where people didn't boo at some
point but that adds to it."
US farce
At the moment, Rock is busy promoting the American remake of the low-budget
British farce Death At A Funeral.
The film location moves from rural England to the US and sees Chris Rock's
Aaron, on the day of his father's funeral, dealing with a broody wife, an
overbearing mother, a cousin's boyfriend who has accidentally ingested a
hallucinogenic drug and a successful sibling, played by fellow comedian Martin
Lawrence.
Peter Dinklage reprises his role as his father's secret lover intent on
blackmailing Aaron with some compromising polaroids of his dad.
The original film, directed by Frank Oz in 2007, was savaged by British critics
and mostly completely unseen by US cinema-goers, though reviews out of the
States were more positive.
The new film sees an inevitable shift in tone from mortifying British
embarrassment for a more slapstick approach.
"I would have thought it would be more daunting," insists Rock, who also acts
as producer on the film.
Chris Rock and Martin Lawrence get to grips with Peter Dinklage (centre) The
film stays quite faithful to the original 2007 movie
"But once I did stand up over here and saw how that went, it relaxed me. We're
gonna change some words here, we're gonna add some humour. There's a lot of
little jokes in this one that aren't in the original."
Theatre playwright Neil LaBute is the man in the director's chair and the cast
includes 30 Rock's Tracy Morgan, Loretta Devine, Luke Wilson, Danny Glover, and
Avatar's Zoe Saldana.
The predominantly black casting has led to some US critics suggesting the film
will be limited to mainly black audiences, something Rock is keen to refute.
"Put it this way, I'm black and my comedy has always appealed to a wide
audience. Especially over here, the people are a little more liberal than in
the States so hopefully it will appeal to a wide audience."
Rock is currently working on the script for his biography of seminal comedian
Richard Pryor.
The film is due to star Marlon Wayans in the lead role. Rock says his actor
lends a "vulnerability" to Pryor - who died in 2005.
Rock has also turned documentarian for Good Hair, an investigation into the
$9bn-a-year black hair industry.
According to Rock, he was inspired to make the film after his five-year-old
daughter asked him: "Daddy, how come I don't have good hair." It is due out in
the UK later this month.
Citing Michael Moore as a "major influence", Rock also says Good Hair is "the
funniest movie I've made".
He says he is hoping to be back in the UK again soon with another live show but
says the challenge will be to make the bigger venues "more intimate" adding,
"I'm going to work with screens and stuff."
Death At A Funeral is open across UK cinemas now.