
USA | 1984 | Directed by Alex Cox
Logline: An indignant teenage punk-rocker is recruited by a car repossession agent and becomes embroiled in the chaotic pursuit and secret agent shenanigans for a car containing deadly cosmic material.
Made on the smell of an oily rag and sporting some of the cheesiest special effects this side of Edge City Repo Man still manages to rise above its limitations and resonates like the growling weather-beaten Chevy Malibu that is the key non-speaking character of the movie. Of course, the movie actually belongs to the lost streets of Los Angeles, but is snatched in the last moments by something from beyond Terra Firma.

Emilio Estevez plays new wave punker Otto with a careless charisma, almost indifferent to the events that surround him and steer him toward his lofty destiny alongside mechanic Miller (Tracey Walter), who knows oh so much more than his nut-and-bolt-short-of-a-full-engine looks suggest. Harry Dean Stanton is perfect as the cigarette-chewing, speed-snorting repo man whom takes young turk Otto under his smelly wing.

Repo Man has enjoyed the drive-in midnight circuit in America and on crappy VHS machines for years. There’s something about it that lingers, like the stain of grease. It’s overtly stylized and there’s plenty of dodgy acting from the supporting players, some of which works in a wacky kind of way; like Olivia Borash as ingénue Leila. In fact, so stylised is the movie that the characters eat and drink from cans labeled simply “Food” and “Beer”.

This City of Angels is bordering on post-apocalyptic, and is awash with apathy and contempt; one minute Otto is lying with his girlfriend Debbi (Jennifer Balgobin) on a bed, the next minute he returns with a beer for her and she’s making out with opportunist punk Duke (Dick Rude). In a more explicit deleted alternate take Otto returns and punk Archie (Miguel Sandoval) has his head between her thighs. Later sexy Debbi shaves her head into a Mohawk (channeling Annabella via Grace Jones) to join Duke and Archie in an armed robbery spree.

Alex Cox is making sly, subversive statements about consumerism and cosmic consciousness, but really the movie is a more a satirical slap in the face for complacent idealists. If you smoke too much pot you’ll end up glued to the idiot box gathering cobwebs, if you don’t seize any moment you’re liable to end up seized by conspiracy. And watch out for Dioretix, they’ll change your life! Methinks Cox sipped quite a bit of Wolfe’s Electric Kool-Aid back in the day.

Special note must be made in regards to the American punk rock bands whose noisy discords grace the movie’s soundtrack, including The Plugz (who provide all the incidental music as well), The Circle Jerks, Black Flag, Fear, and seminal songs Institutionalized by Suicidal Tendencies and Pablo Picasso (“… was never called an asshole!”) by Burning Sensations. The movie’s theme song is courtesy of proto punk rocker Iggy Pop.

Cox wrote a sequel, Waldo’s Hawaiian Holiday, in the early 90s but it was never made. According to a post on Cox’s own blog a legitimate sequel produced by David Lynch, Repo Chick, is in post-production, but there’s nothing to substantiate this on imdb.com. In the meantime grab yourself a “Beer”, grab a slice of “Pizza” and a copy of “Repo Man” on DVD, just so you can feel part of the bigger picture – feel the intensity – and indulge in some of the more zany moments of 80s indie cinema.

TRAILER:
Repo Man DVD is courtesy of Umbrella Entertainment, many thanks!

I only have this on VHS, I need to get a DVD copy. What a fun movie, and while I normally can’t stomach Emilio, I love him in this. It’s fun and has that slightly dystopian vibe that draws me in every time. You’re right, it is zany. Gosh, I haven’t watched it forever! I wonder if my VCR still works?
Natalina, it would almost be apt to watch this on a dodgy VHS … I agree, I’ve never been a fan of Emilio. His character in this kinda annoys me, but I tolerate it. I prefer him in The Breakfast Club, but then that movie holds a dear place in my heart, I saw it when it came out at the Commack Cinema Centre in Huntington, Long Island.
This movie really does pop with energy, ideas and loose scenes. Great review of one of my guilty pleasures.
Crazy Emilio i always liked him in “Wisdom”…he channeled Robert Altman quite effectively Directing “Bobby” too.
PS harry dean Stanton is criminally unsung as one of the modern greats…such a unique style of performance in anything and everything he does…brave displays of vulnerability and confusion, in many roles.