With zero knowledge on Repo Man, I started the film not knowing what to expect, then that opening scene happened and I even knew less of what to expect. Though I think that was something positive for the film given that it kept the audience hooked. Though when we’re introduced to Otto, the attention shifts and he gets the spotlight. While the alien aspects were undeniably interesting, Otto’s character was also someone interesting; he is not someone we see a lot in modern days. The way he treats people and his work seem inhuman or just plain rude and something that not a lot of us are used to. He also seems clueless in a lot of things, probably because of how he treats others and himself, but also still knows how to work his repo man job properly enough. The dynamic between Otto and Bud was also something that I would have hoped was touched on more, but only because the movie did a good job establishing that in the first place. Away from the usual father figure we see in films, Bud never even starts to become a positive figure to Otto’s life other than teaching him how to do his job. As a side note that is almost totally unrelated, seeing Otto and Bud reminded me of the mentor-mentee relationship in the first Return of the Living Dead; the films are highly different though but some aspects regarding 80s culture was there. Jumping from that point regarding the 80s, there were numerous elements in the film that I could relate to the 80s especially because of the plethora of iconic 80s films we have been exposed to.
Despite those similarities, Repo Man was still able to differentiate itself through non-ideal characters like Otto and Bud and weird elements such as the alien that we are not given full explanations about. The conclusion involving Otto and his “transcendence” was something that I did not expect at all; the alien car seemed unrelated to Otto but was something that gained the attention of the government, the scientists, the religious (in the form the televangelist), and even the audience. None seemed to understand the car though other than Miller, Otto’s and Bud’s weird mechanic co-worker; perhaps in seeing and taking Repo Man in, we have to be like Miller and have a different perspective to better appreciate what is in front of us. If we can’t appreciate such things, then perhaps they can be taken from us similar to how Otto and his repo man job does so.
These are somewhat stretches though in analyzing the film. Minor details also attracted the attention of the audience. For one, the consumer goods we encounter in the film are brand-less, generic items with text-only packaging designs; I still have no assumptions on why this is such. Minor characters too are interesting; Otto’s punk friends for example offer interesting perspectives as proprietors of disorder though late into the film, we see one of them longing for a decent life with his partner only to be rejected and hence left back to the life of chaos. These relatively minor details contributed to making Repo Man a memorable film that differentiates itself from other 80s movies. I will definitely look into more Alex Cox films after seeing this one!








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