Film Critic to the Culver City Observer and over 132 Publications Worldwide including: The Observer, Inc., John Schimmenti, Inc., CCN, Inc.,
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Bubble
by
debbie lynn elias

Essentially unscripted, unrehearsed and using localities
as actors, “Bubble” is essentially the story
of three individuals with only two things in common - they all work
in a doll factory located in an impoverished section of Ohio near the
West Virginia border and they are all connected to a murder. Meet Martha.
A late thirty-something/early forty-something, friendly, short, dumpy
woman, she lives with her elderly and infirm father. She is also quite
smitten with Kyle. So, let’s meet Kyle. Martha’s best friend and some
10 years her junior, he lives with his mother in a trailer. (Although
I am sure it’s not as nice as my aunt’s pink double-wide in Georgia!)
And then we have Rose. New to the area and the doll factory, the chain-smoking,
promiscuous single mother is everything Martha is not. Young, thin,
pretty and on the prowl for some male companionship.
Life goes along as usual for our trio. Set against
the creepy backdrop of the doll factory contrasting
with the area’s stark Christian values and ever-present religious imagery,
the disposable lifestyles of Martha, Kyle and Rose indicate they, and
everyone around them, all seem to be stuck in the same rut. Day in and
day out. They go with the flow. But all that is about to change when
Rose gets an itch to date. Needing a baby-sitter for her 2 year old,
she enlists the help of Martha, who is only too happy to help out; that
is until she finds out that Rose’s date is Kyle. Adding a little fuel
to the fire is the appearance of Rose’s stalker ex-boyfriend. And did
I mention a dead body turns up in Rose’s house after date night?
Using only local residents from the Southern Ohio/West
Virginia area both helped and hindered the project. With no acting experience
at all, Soderbergh plucked his stars from local eateries, shops and
police departments. As Martha, Kentucky Fried Chicken general manager
Debbie Doebereiner gives perhaps the strongest and strong willed performance
of this group of unknowns. Undoubtedly
calling on her 24 years of managerial experience with KFC, her best
work comes with a mere look, glance or stance. Somewhere inside, I just
know that hair stylist Misty Dawn Wilkins is a wannabe actress. Her
take on Rose both while at work with her freakishly exacting doll make-up
administration and at home with her soapish play of a sex starved hey-look-at-me
single, lonely mother just screams out frustrated-stuck-in-podunkville-woman.
Computer student Dustin James Ashley is non-descript as Kyle while various
local police officers actually play police officers investigating the
murder in the film. Let’s hope they are more convincing in real life
than on the reel. Their stiffness and nervousness almost turns the entire
film into the ridiculous.
Non-actors added an interesting element to the film and it worked well as a mildly pleasant viewing experience until the story turned from everyday humdrum into a murder mystery. Faced with having to draw from their imagination and act out and emote feelings and concepts, not to their discredit, the “actors” fell far from their mark and detracted from the story. No emotion? No response to a murder? Or is this the way the “real” world reacts to such a tragedy.
Shot on the fly and in HD by Soderbergh, the film is well crafted; simplistic in nature, but with an interesting complexity thanks to the meld of Coleman Hough’s screenplay and Soderbergh’s direction. Using an almost excessive amount of establishing shots (which is not in keeping with Soderbergh’s other works), there is a clean concise feel to the film. Steady, assured and calming to the point of, at times, pushing the envelope to boring, much like the steady, ho-hum life of the town and its residents, Soderbergh’s visuals tell the story, which as to be expected, has some unexpected twists and turns and despite its faults, keeps the viewer engaged and interested.
The first in a six-film series where Soderbergh will direct a cast of non-professionals and shoot in HD video, it will be interesting to see whether the HD format and simultaneous cinema-DVD-tv release “Bubble” bursts any bubbles or bubbles to the top ten.
Martha: Debbie Doebereiner Rose: Misty Dawn Wilkins Kyle: Dustin James Ashley
Directed by Steven Soderbergh. Written by Coleman Hough. A Magnolia Films release. Rated R. (73 min)