Repo Man Review
By Mark Athitakis
In one of his first leading roles, Emelio Estevez plays Otto, a young punker who's found himself stuck in a dead-end spiral: A cheating girlfriend, zombified parents who live under the hypnotic spell of a televangelist, and crummy job at a supermarket where his best friend is the geeky Kevin (Zander Schloss), who's a sort of proto-Napoleon Dynamite. Lured in by Bud (Harry Dean Stanton), a dissipated, disjointed, and cranked-up repo man, Otto begins a new life freeing cars from delinquent owners. Nobody in the repo shop is particularly likeable, but they have the benefit of non-mainstream quirkiness, particularly Miller (Tracy Walter), a half-homeless hanger-on who expounds on a variety of deep matters: John Wayne's sexual proclivities, the ubiquity of tree-shaped air fresheners, and the synchronicities of everyday life.
The main plot involves chasing down the aforementioned Malibu, which isn't terribly compelling in itself. But it introduces us to a wonderfully Fellini-esque cast of characters. Converging on the car along with the repo men are a gang of Latinos in pimped-out rides, the Feds, a conspiracy nut in the form of a love interest (Olivia Barash,) and another gang of L.A. punks, including Duke (Dick Rude), who before dying gets off one of the film's most-quoted lines: "I blame... society!"
So does Cox. Taking its cue from songs on the (excellent) soundtrack like Black Flag's "TV Party" and Suicidal Tendencies' "Institutionalized," Repo Man suggests that our weird dumb world is a product of too much homogenization; a running joke has everybody eating and drinking out of cans and tins dully labeled "drink" or "beer" or "food." Walking it like he talks it, the fun of Repo Man is in how it deliberately flouts film conventions, concocting a world that's strange and irreverent but still looks and feels a lot like our own. Its snarky attitude made it cult classic in 1984, but it endures because few movies since have made blaming society look like so much fun.

Facts and Figures
Year: 1984
Run time: 92 mins
In Theaters: Friday 2nd March 1984
Box Office Worldwide: $2.3M
Budget: $1.5M
Distributed by: Universal Pictures
Production compaines: Edge City
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 98%
Fresh: 44 Rotten: 1
IMDB: 6.9 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Alex Cox
Producer: Peter McCarthy, Jonathan Wacks
Screenwriter: Alex Cox
Starring: Harry Dean Stanton as Bud, Emilio Estevez as Otto Maddox, Tracey Walter as Miller, Olivia Barash as Leila, Sy Richardson as Lite, Susan Barnes as Agent Rogersz, Fox Harris as J. Frank Parnell, Tom Finnegan as Oly, Del Zamora as Lagarto, Eddie Velez as Napo, Zander Schloss as Kevin, Jennifer Balgobin as Debbi, Dick Rude as Duke, Miguel Sandoval as Archie, Vonetta McGee as Marlene, Richard Foronjy as Plettschner, Bruce White as Reverend Larry
Also starring: Peter McCarthy, Jonathan Wacks, Alex Cox