To quote the tagline for last year's awesome The Hunting Party, a movie I'll continue to reference on a weekly basis until you all see it, "how can they find the world's most wanted war criminal when the CIA can't? By actually looking." At least one person has taken this tagline to heart — Morgan Spurlock, documentary filmmaking's logical successor to Michael Moore. In Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden?, which premiered at this year's Sundance Film Festival, Morgan Spurlock goes on a quest to find Bin Laden, armed only with a camera and a satchel full of culture-clash gags. Most of the trailer is comprised of the latter, as when Spurlock shows up the Middle East wearing traditional Muslim garb while still sporting his trademark trucker 'stache. It also looks like he tries to get a lot of comic mileage out of simply asking people if they've seen Bin Laden, which wears pretty thin by the end of the trailer. All in all, Spurlock's films, while just as reliant on issues-based comedy as Moore's, are less concerned with actual politics, although how you feel about this probably depends on your thoughts on Michael Moore. As far as Spurlock is concerned, I'm still waiting for him to really impress me.