We open not in Vietnam, but at a Tobey Maguire-era Spider-Man 3 press junket, 2007. A nervous Kirk Lazarus (Robert Downey Jr., still as the “Australian method actor”) is asked about his controversial “pigmentation alteration” for an upcoming war film. Before he can answer, the screen glitches. A distorted voice— “The director’s cut is not for you. It’s for the people they left behind.” —throws us into a VHS-quality audition tape.
A door slams. A lock turns. The screen goes to static.
A black screen. A single sound: “I’m a dude playin’ a dude disguised as another dude.” Then a heartbeat. Then a voice—Kirk Lazarus, still in Sgt. Lincoln Osiris makeup—whispering from inside a shipping container: Tropic Thunder -2008- -Unrated Director--s Cut-...
We are on a . The entire jungle was a set. The cast is standing around, exhausted. Kirk Lazarus is out of character, talking to a therapist (played by Paul Thomas Anderson , uncredited). Tugg Speedman is crying into a Booty Sweat can.
We hear clapperboards. Lights turn on.
“They forgot me here. The director’s cut never ends. Send… craft services…”
Then Les Grossman walks in. He holds up a phone. We open not in Vietnam, but at a
“They still don’t know they’re in a movie… but now you will.”