One of the biggest drawbacks of comedy is that it doesn’t always age well. Some people rewatching Friends, for instance, have argued there are moments in the hit comedy series that are homophobic, misogynistic, or transphobic.
UFC commentator and radio host Joe Rogan has condemned Ace Ventura: Pet Detective as “insanely transphobic,” in an episode of his show. Rogan discussed his shock at realising how “super transphobic” the 1994 film is during a conversation with his guest, New York Times opinion writer and editor Bari Weiss.
“I didn’t realise how transphobic that f**king movie is,” Rogan added.
Rogan then discussed the main plot twist – in which a detective, played by cisgender woman Sean Young, is revealed to be transgender.
“Everyone is freaking out. It is so insanely transphobic.”
Rogan’s guest, Bari Weiss, added: “When I saw that movie, I was 10. Transphobia was not a thing. Now it is a thing. That’s good. That’s good news.”
Not only that, but when Ventura realises Finkle and Einhorn are the same person, and he remembers sharing an embrace with Einhorn, his reaction involves vomiting and crying in the shower.
Another Twitter user also said: “At the very least it’s homophobic. Ventura re-enacts the shower scene from The Crying Game – a film about a transwoman – as a response to having kissed a man he thought was a woman. And it’s played for laughs. Grim.”
Someone else wrote: “It’s base level comedy with no intelligence to it. I don’t think it’s either trans or homophobic as such but it’s touching the edges of being offensive. I do believe there’s a difference. You can offend without hating something.”
A third added: “Oh wow the end of Ace Ventura: Pet Detective is super transphobic.”
Some others have defended the movie, with one person tweeting: “So people that are just now watching Ace Ventura: Pet Detective for the first time are saying it’s too offensive. Yeah, it is because that’s what we did then. We watched offensive shit without getting f*cking offended like a bunch of bitches… End rant.”
Another argued: “The character played by Sean Young was not trans. He was a man hiding as a woman to exact his revenge. Lighten up, it wasn’t about gender discrimination.”
The ’90s were a complicated time for homophobia and transphobia in movies, and especially in comedy.