While the film is famous for its crude "Sandler-esque" humor—including an obsession with hummus as a multi-purpose product
The film has been accused of crude stereotyping: the Arab taxi driver who loves hummus, the sly Palestinian terrorist “The Phantom” (John Turturro), the aggressive Israeli father, the greedy electronics store owner. However, these caricatures function less as mockery than as a mirror to each side’s dehumanization of the other. When Zohan and The Phantom become unlikely allies in a New York salon, the film argues that proximity and shared economic interest (selling “fizzy bubblech” drinks, serving hummus) dissolve ideological purity. The joke is not on Arabs or Israelis but on the stubbornness of their feud. You Dont Mess With The Zohan -2008- -Bolly4u.or...