Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls ✦ Tested & Hot
The primary antagonist is not the tribal leader, but (Simon Callow), a British white hunter archetype. Cadby wants to start a tribal war to create a “hunting preserve” for rich tourists—a metaphor for the real-world exploitation of African resources and conflict by Western powers. He literally wants to turn human life into a safari diorama.
But the key scene is the with the female conservationist (played by Sophie Okonedo). Ace is completely oblivious to her advances, more interested in scrubbing himself with a toilet brush and making a “duck sound” with his armpit. His heterosexuality is performative and failed. Instead, his deepest emotional bond is with a white bat and a giant mechanical rhino. This celibate, animal-focused masculinity is a parody of the rugged individualist hero (James Bond, John Rambo) whose sexuality is supposed to prove his virility. Ace proves his virility by being born from a fake rhino’s rear end. 5. Legacy: The Pinnacle of “Carrey-ism” and its Limits When Nature Calls is often cited as the film where Jim Carrey “went too far.” Critics panned it (29% on Rotten Tomatoes), but audiences made it a hit ($212 million worldwide). Why the divide? ace ventura: when nature calls
The relationship between Ace and his animal sidekick, , is played like a bickering married couple. Ace dresses Spike in doll clothes, talks to him in a baby voice, and experiences genuine emotional distress when Spike is “killed” (only to find he has mated). The primary antagonist is not the tribal leader,
In the decades since, the film has become a cult object. Its jokes have entered the meme lexicon (“The sacred animal is... a bat?” “The llllllllllllllllllllllllllike of Africa”). It stands as a time capsule of a pre-irony, pre-political-correctness era where a man could talk out of his butt and that was the punchline. But the key scene is the with the
Consider the . Ace does not speak for a full minute. Instead, he communicates via a series of grotesque, elastic facial contortions and body spasms that mimic the tribe’s own language. This is not “acting crazy”; it is a hyper-articulate use of the body as a semiotic system. He creates a universal, pre-verbal comedy that transcends the script’s puns.
Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls is not a “good” film in the conventional sense. It is a . But it is also a brilliant deconstruction of action-hero tropes, a physical comedy masterclass, and an accidental post-colonial satire. It pushes the logic of the first film to its breaking point and then leaps over the line into surreal, glorious nonsense. It is the cinematic equivalent of a sugar high—exhausting, unsustainable, and undeniably fun while it lasts.