Cult Cinema: Buster's Mal Heart (2016) - Reviewed

Courtesy of Well Go USA
Before touching the global film community with his Academy Award winning performance as Freddie Mercury in the Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody, American-Egyptian actor Rami Malek first started dabbling in artier indie fare with Paul Thomas Anderson’s 70mm scientology epic The Master before collaborating with Spike Lee for a second time on Da Sweet Blood of Jesus.  Between these and his impending Oscar winning role was The Midnight Swim writer-director Sarah Adina Smith’s beguiling, haunted surreal mystery film Buster’s Mal Heart, a picture that is as confounding yet intriguing as the title itself.  Moreover, it displays the actor’s willingness to dive head over heels deep into a difficult role in an even more difficult picture that isn’t ready to completely reveal itself.  Is it science fiction or something more definable of the real world?

 
Told in nonlinear fashion cross-cutting freely between past and present, we happen upon a bearded long-haired scruffy mountain man nicknamed “Buster” who is evading a police manhunt trying to shoot him down.  In between breaking into people’s houses and hiding out to survive, he frequently calls into radio stations to talk about an impending inversion set to turn the world and universe inside out.  Over time we learn Buster was formerly a well-to-do hotel concierge named Jonah Cueyatl (Rami Malek) who was a family man married to Marty (Kate Lyn Sheil) and living with his daughter Roxy and his mother Pauline (Lin Shaye).  One night after working one too many after-hours shifts, a self-proclaimed computer engineer who only calls himself “The Last Free Man” (DJ Qualls) happens upon the hotel who relays a variety of conspiracy theories pointing to an impending inversion, setting in motion a self-destructive chain reaction in Jonah that leads to his mountain man rampage.

 
Somewhat of a character study, somewhat of a science-fiction odyssey, somewhat of a survival thriller but somehow not really being any of the three, Sarah Adina Smith’s Buster’s Mal Heart is frankly uncategorizable.  Either a study of madness or genuinely poking into metaphysical portals, this weird and offbeat clean-cut turned mountain-man drama-thriller poses more questions than it provides answers but nevertheless is anchored by a powerful leading performance by Malek who has the range to be either endearing or chilling.  A bit of a one-man show interspersed with brief interactions with other characters including the always lanky DJ Qualls as a conspiracy theorist and A Nightmare on Elm Street legend Lin Shaye, Buster’s Mal Heart however strange or perplexing things get is grounded by Malek’s chameleonic performance.
 
Shot in eighteen days in Kalispell, Montana with portions filmed in the Glacier National Park and the open ocean by Shaheen Seth, the look and feel of Buster’s Mal Heart is intended to echo the character’s own transformation.  Key scenes of the title character in the fancy hotel uniform show the character’s cleanliness while outdoor scenes of him foraging in the mountains covered in facial hair reflect his increasingly unpresentable appearance.  The score by electronic artist Mister Squinter is profoundly affecting including in scenes that are completely unexpected emotional roller coasters.  It goes without saying that Rami Malek, though surrounded by notable ensemble actors, shoulders the film all by himself.  Exuding paranoia, desperation and a survival instinct in his eyes as he anticipates a world-ending event, Malek all but completely inhabits the character from top to bottom which makes his drastic change from family man to scruffy nomad all the more tragic.

 
Produced by female driven film production company Gamechanger Films and given a limited release by Well Go USA, Buster’s Mal Heart came and went to positive reception but made a miniscule blip at the box office.  Having seen this film right before Willem Dafoe’s Inside helped pave the way for that film’s ordeal as both are debatably exemplar of experimental theater involving one actor taking center stage.  Buster’s Mal Heart may not clearly tell you what’s going on, if the character like Max Cohen in Darren Aronofsky’s π is either insane or really onto something extraordinary, but what it does do is immerse you in the character’s headspace and worldview so you feel his pain, anxieties and perhaps his madness even if you don’t completely understand what’s driving it.  For those who only know Rami Malek’s work through Bohemian Rhapsody, the Movie Sleuth invites you to take a look at one of his lesser known but no less valuable starring roles that helped usher in one of the silver screen’s most unexpected major talents.

--Andrew Kotwicki