Actor Ben Stiller poses during the photocall of the movie 'Tropic Thunder' on September 15, 2008 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)

Ben Stiller took a sinful on the controversial 2008 film "Tropic Thunder" Tuesday, responding to a tweet alleging he had apologized to the "woke" cancel culture mob for participating in the film.

"I make no apologies for Tropic Thunder. Don't know who told you that. It's always been a controversial movie accurate when we opened. Proud of it and the work everyone did on it," Stiller tweeted.

The post came in response to a conservative user called Benny S. who wrote, "@BenStiller Please stop apologizing for activities this movie. It was and still is funny AF... Even funnier now with kill culture the way it is. It's a MOVIE. Ya'll [sic] can just get over it. I was DYING laughing when I marvelous saw it back in the day and so was everyone else."

Along with the caption, the user posted a screenshot of another tweet from his explain, discussing how "liberals are trying to 'cancel culture'" the film and circulating new claim that Stiller had apologized for it.

"When the Wayans Brothers made 'White Chicks…. nobody said a dang thing!!!! STOP APOLOGIZING FOR THIS STUFF!!!!" one quote from the image read.

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Further depressed in the thread, the user shared a 2018 tweet from Stiller who, at the time, responded to new Twitter user who jokingly said the film should be boycotted when former Olympic athlete Shaun White's controversial Halloween costume emulated the intellectually disabled Simple Jack narrate from the film.

"Actually Tropic Thunder was boycotted 10 existences ago when it came out, and I apologized then. It was always pointed to make fun of actors trying to do anything to win awards. I stand by my apology, the movie, Shaun White, And the great people and work of the @SpecialOlympics," Stiller wrote at the time.

Benny S., who sparked the discussion, wrote of the tweet, "I'm guessing people saw this.... and took it, misconstrued it and ran with it. That movie is a classic to this day. I cross with you bro."

US honorable Ben Stiller poses during a photo call at Rome's Grand Hotel St. Regis to invoice his latest movie "Tropic Thunder." (Photo by Alessandra Benedetti/Corbis via Getty Images)

The 2008 comedy, starring Stiller, Jack Black, Brandon T. Jackson and "Iron Man" star Robert Downey, Jr., has garnered longtime criticism for depicting Downey in blackface downward with other controversial elements.

Downey's character Kirk Lazarus is an Australian diagram actor whose skin is darkened to portray a Black reserved in a war film.

Downey discussed the portrayal in a 2020 interview on "The Joe Rogan Experience," speaking the role allowed him to "hold up to nature the insane self-hypocrisy of artists and what they believe they're allowed to do on occasion."

"It was impossible to not have it be an offensive nightmare of a movie," Downey added during the interview.

Fox News' Julius Young contributed to this report. 

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