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Rubber - Blu-ray Review

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Rubber - Blu-ray Review

4 stars

If anything can be said about Quentin Dupieux’s film, know that Rubber will have you identifying with a car tire and never tiring of the puns that tread in the wake of such a statement.  It’s a film where – clocking in at a crisp 85 minutes - your tolerance for surreal absurdities will be tested and then tested again; a film inside a film.  It’s also insanely original and hysterically funny…if a murderous tire peeking in on a woman in the shower is your sort of thing.  Make no mistake, the horror/comedy genre has been a little dry of late and could use a little more caffeinated jolt in its tapwater than it has been getting and serving; something this film has plenty of.

So there’s this tire buried in the sand of the desert.  Its name is Robert.  That’s right, Robert the rubber tire and, rolling down the road slowly on its own, it discovers the ability it has to make things dead.  Oh, it doesn’t run over the objects.  It’s not THAT type of movie.  Robert can flex his tire innards to cause objects (cans, birds, rabbits, humans) explode.  It’s quite a trick.  A messy one, too.

leave it to the French to top David Lynch.

Broken up by audience comments (yes, even in the desert) and a story involving a police officer – Lieutenant Chad (Stephen Spinella) - that is unwilling to do the investigation (because it’s all fake), Rubber is a film wrapped inside a film positioned inside a murder mystery of sorts, Dupieux’s screenplay spins on an axis that is all too aware of itself as an experiment.

One would think that a film about a tire would wear out its welcome, but – guided by Dupieux’s obvious visual flair, the film never feels … flat.  Maybe the film isn’t as terrifying as it could be (a knife-wielding tire perhaps?) but it does pattern itself very well after a slasher film.  Think Tobe Hooper’s The Texas Chainsaw Massacre on wheels.  Once the tire gets a taste for blood (he blows up a rabbit in the early morning) he just can’t stop.  You see, Robert the rubber tire is a serial killer.

Ultimately, personal perception will either get this film killed or make it click for you.  Things don’t make sense.  Walls are broken all around you.  This is meta-film for its own sake.  You just have to go with where it takes you – kinda like a tire “waking” up and learning to roll on its own.  It’s an unusual little indie trip of a film and full of bizarre theatrics, yet so much fun and never simple filler.  One can applaud the effort or dismiss it.  I choose to applaud…even if I am shouting its name alone from the mountain tops.

For those eggheads inspired by Dupieux’s commentary on commercialism and exploitation throughout Rubber, don’t get too carried away with yourselves…you’ll miss the fun time other people are having with the film.

Blu-ray Review of Quentin Dupieux's Rubber starring Stephen Spinella, Jack Plotnick, Wings Hauser, and Roxane Mesquida.

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