You can now find deleted scenes from the 2020 film, including a 12-minute extended version of Borat’s "dancing baby" costume disaster and raw audio of the infamous Rudy Giuliani scene without the laugh track. Within 48 hours of the film’s release, a fan had uploaded a "script-to-screen" comparison, splicing the final Amazon cut with the raw shooting script (scanned from a leaked production copy).
The Internet Archive hosts a collection of materials related to Sacha Baron Cohen’s Borat , including the 2007 touristic guide book, early promotional screensavers, and regulatory classification documents. These records provide insight into the film's production and cultural impact, including early career clips and critical commentary. Explore these materials at Archive.org . borat archive.org
From a digital preservation perspective, archive.org users often justify uploading commercially available films like Borat as a means of ensuring access if the film is ever censored, pulled from streaming services, or altered. Given that Borat contains satirical but controversial content (nudity, anti-Semitism played for satire, misogyny), some archivists argue that preserving the "theatrical cut" is important. However, mainstream legal and industry views classify these uploads as . You can now find deleted scenes from the
When Borat Subsequent Moviefilm dropped on Amazon Prime in 2020, the world was in lockdown. Baron Cohen once again tested material. And once again, that raw footage ended up on Archive.org. These records provide insight into the film's production
When you navigate to Archive.org and type "Borat," the first shock is the sheer volume of raw footage. In the months leading up to the film’s theatrical release, Baron Cohen and the production team were still testing material. Users have uploaded VHS-rips and digital transfers of the "Borat’s Roadtrip" tapes—unedited, uncensored interactions that never made the final cut.