Posts Tagged ‘Repo Man’

Stream Repo Man Online

Thursday, December 31st, 2009
Stream Repo Man Online. Stream Repo Man Online.

Movie Title: Repo Man
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Repo Man is available for streaming or downloading.

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Repo Man is completely unclassifiable. Amusing, dim, biting, thrilling, confusing, action, adventure, it’s all there. Emilio Estevez plays Otto, a “white suburban punk” living in LA’s sprawl, with a nowhere job that he loses in the film’s second scene. When his hippie parents admit they sent his college fund to a TV preacher (We’re sending Bibles to El Salvador!), Otto meets Bud (Harry Dean Stanton), a cocaine-driven Repo Man who needs an extra driver. Otto joins the firm and soon learns the Repo Code; Bud’s version (You peek, a Repo Man gets himself INTO tense situations), and the other regulars at Helping Hand Auto section their philosophies too. Light finds Bud’s understanding stupid but is willing to handle shoot-outs when he’s not reading parodies of Scientology (Diuretix), Miller seems completely neuron-fried (The more you drive, the less intellectual you are), and Oly is along to produce a four-pack. (Did you spy the four experienced Repo Men are named after beers? ) Let’s go score a drink, kid!

Multiple area strands at first seem unrelated, but bind together closer and tighter as the film moves along. Otto and the other Repo Men are on the lookout for a 1964 Chevy Malibu, with a $25,000 bounty. So are some creepy FBI agents, who stalk and kidnap Otto. And so are Helping Hand’s arch-rivals, who careen into the location whenever things are getting expressionless. The car’s driven by a nuclear physicist in from Los Alamos, who warned a CHP officer not to witness in the trunk (with deadly results) . Otto’s punk friends net the car while breaking into a pharmaceutical factory, but they’re too expressionless to preserve it. (These three are some of the dumbest criminals ever shown in film, including Kevin Kline’s Otto in _A Fish Called Wanda_) Otto finds like, after a fashion, but since this is Reaganesque LA, even his girlfriend has her enjoy motives. (”Otto! What about our relationship? ” Otto’s acknowledge is a gleaming respond to Cary Grant’s last line in Gone with the Wind.)

The film abounds with hilarious throw-away lines, signs, and labels. Several scenes seize plot in food stores, and all the food is generically labeled. Multiple viewings are required to accumulate them all; be definite to read all the signs in the windows. Even the TV preacher shows up on several television sets. Repo Man takes its structure from Miller’s bizarre rant about the cosmic latticework of interconnectedness, because everything is interconnected, and Miller turns out to be moral about all of it by the kill. “And flying saucers are… You got it. Time Machines.”

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Top it off with a TERRIFIC sound track by Iggy Pop, Sad Flag, The Circle Jerks, and a host of others from the punk scene and this is one of the best movies ever made.

Every decade, there seems to be a movie that defines the angst of the culture and the subculture, the collective feeling that something is execrable with the establishment. To call this zeitgeist is misleading; these films don’t think the spirit of the times as grand as they somehow tap into the opposite – they manage to compose an all-around sense of unease about the set of the world. In the 1960s, it was The Graduate and the bombshell glance at the ruin. For the 1990s, Fight Club identified many things nefarious both with pop culture and those acting in rebellion against it. For the Reagan-saturated 1980s, the distinction falls squarely on Alex Cox’s debut film Repo Man. In one of his first roles, Emilio Estevez plays Otto, a street punk who loses his job and college savings in the same day due to misunderstandings and television preachers. At the kill of his rope financially and mentally, he agrees to produce a speedy 20 bucks by helping experienced repo man Bud (Harry Dean Stanton) . Realizing the potential to acquire a well-behaved living, and an “intense” life in his original job, Otto signs up with the crew and becomes a repo man. On the blueprint, he meets an novel woman (Olivia Barash) whom he snappy falls in lust with. When word comes down the wire that there’s an large commission out on a 1964 Chevy Malibu, Otto and all the other repo men area out to glance for the car with the big win. What they salvage in the trunk is so unique, it will change everything – EVERYTHING.

What makes Repo Man so current is the positive satirization not only of regular, and in this case conservative Reagean-esque, culture, from the “John Wayne was [gay]” speech to Bud’s trashing of Russia, but the send-ups of punk culture (Let’s go do some crimes! Yeah, let’s net sushi and not pay!) Otto is the everyman in every sense of the word, as he – like us – realizes that no matter what culture he tries to be a fraction of, he never fits in, and those strains of culture are so rife with stupidity and hypocrisy that he no longer wants to belong. Like The Graduate and Fight Club, Repo Man also refuses to supply a stock retort, instead making the audience request instead of spoonfeeding them. Plus, it’s roll-on-the-floor laughable, with some of the best oneliners since Faulty Insensible 2 or Terminator 2. Alex Cox made Repo Man while level-headed in film school, and he basically admits it’s exiguous more than a trumped-up student film. The lack of budget is certain at times, but the killer screenplay and direction more than produce up for that minute fault. As usual, the movie looks satisfactory on Anchor Bay’s DVD; the sound and video are as certain as you can ask for, with a remixed 5.1 audio track to boot. There’s a huge commentary track with Alex Cox, some castmembers (sadly, no Harry Dean or Emilio), and some crew; it’s a lot like a Kevin Smith commentary, with everyone sitting in one room, having a large time talking about a enormous film. There are no other extras to express of, unless you capture the collector’s tin (which does not gape like the normal Repo Man veil – it looks like a California license plate, with Repo Man on it) . The collector’s tin has the soundtrack on CD and a booklet about the movie with a puny humorous in it. Unless you are a major fan or must have the best of the best of the best edition, there’s no need to remove the more expensive version, but if you want it, you’d better accept it rapid, because at 30,000 copies, it’ll be gone before you know it.

I would definitely check this movie out if you can, and would recommend buying it to anyone who asked.
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