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"How rad! My suit means stop and yours means go. Who thinks of this highly original stuff??" |
Since I am an eighties kid (born in 1981, thank you very
much) I have a soft spot for films and music from that era. All the eighties
kids have grown up and some of them became filmmakers, which is why I think that
aesthetic is recently coming back in a big way. Now there is a difference
between something being a loving homage and just simply pandering to a
demographic—if the recent bomb Pixels
is any indication, then audience members want to see their childhood represented
accurately. I find that these types of films work better when they take tropes
from eighties films and use them in a new way, as opposed to just vomiting
literal references all over the place and dumping a story on top--kinda like
how the janitor used sawdust when somebody barfed at school.
Turbo Kid not only
avoids these pitfalls (see what I did there, Pitfall was a radical Atari game from the eighties) it manages to
be a fun little film on its own. It’s a love letter to a simpler time when movies
didn’t need intricate plots and crazy special effects—all you needed was a
protagonist, super cool weapons and a villain with bad ass fashion sense,
preferably with an eyepatch. Turbo Kid
revolves around, well…a kid known only as “The Kid” (Munro Chambers) who has to
survive in a post-apocalyptic wasteland in the distant future of 1997. He ends
up befriending a bubbly girl with pink hair named Apple (Laurence Leboeuf) and
has to fight against an evil overlord who has dubbed himself Zeus (Michael
Ironside). Side note: when I saw Ironside for the first time I couldn’t help
but shout “See you at the party Richter!”.
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"By the power of Greyskull!" |
This movie is billed as a sort of action/horror hybrid even
though on the surface it comes off as silly and lighthearted. There is some serious gore depicted in this film and
most of it is made with practical effects. I’m talkin’ heads exploding, jaws
getting torn off, guts getting ripped out and other various atrocities. It’s a
sticky, bloody, gooey good time and the costume and makeup team did an
outstanding job. So while all of this grisly shit is going on, you have a goofy
plot going on in the background which shouldn’t work, but somehow does. All of
the actors are so earnest in their roles and you can’t help but smile at the
antics going on every second. Turbo Kid
is like if the movie Rad and the
video game Fallout mated and produced
a kick ass baby. Everything has that sweet retro-future look to it with bright
primary colors, ridiculously awesome costume designs, and giant boxy analog-looking
technology.
-Michelle Kisner
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