https://www.starburstmagazine.com
  • Subscribe
  • Featured
  • Reviews
  • Podcasts
  • News
  • Trailer Park
  • Subscribe
  • Film Festival
  • Store
  • Cart (0)
  • (0)
  • Account

Sorry there are no results, please try searching for something else

Please Use the search box on the left to search the site.

Search Results:

News

Out Now – ISSUE 448

STARBURST celebrates the anti-hero with previews ...

News

Guillermo del Toro Signs with DreamWorks Animation

For genre fans, Guillermo del Toro has been viewed ...

News

GOOSEMBUMPS Sequel Adds Peyton Wich

With a Goosebumps sequel currently in development, ...

News

A WALKING DEAD Movie Could Happen

Sadly, more and more viewers seemed to have been ...

News

The Nee Brothers to Direct MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE

For several years now, Sony Pictures has been ...

reviews

BATMAN NINJA

The loose premise of Batman Ninja was enough to ...

reviews

SLEEPING DOGS (1977)

If you’ve got a fondness for New Zealand cinema ...

trailers

DEADPOOL 2

Director: DAVID LEITCH Screenplay: RHETT REECE, ...

News

Syfy Gives Order to the Russos’ DEADLY CLASS Adaptation

With comic book adaptations everywhere we turn ...

News

F. Gary Gray to Direct M.A.S.K.

We’ve know for a while now that Paramount Pictures ...

Reviews | Written by Andrew Marshall 29/05/2016

DER BUNKER

A nameless student rents a room in a remote forest bunker so he can remove himself from the distractions of real life and concentrate on his studies and work. However, the family who live in the underground fortress soon prove to be as detached from the real world as their home, and before long he becomes hopelessly lost in an incomprehensible world driven by incomprehensible rules, warped egos and psychosexual games.

The Father believes himself to be far more intelligent than he actually is, a shortcoming only highlighted by his determination to prove it, whether to others or himself. His attempt to intellectually deconstruct a basic joke and ascribe meandering significance to every invented nuance actually makes you cringe. The Mother exists in apparent thrall to the mysterious Heinrich, who is only heard as a sinister and sibilant voice echoing seemingly from thin air. Then there’s Klaus, the couple’s eight-year-old son who is quite clearly a grown man – albeit a very short one – wearing children’s clothes (a discrepancy which is never even addressed) and who the Student becomes an unwilling tutor, too.

Nothing that happens in Der Bunker makes the slightest bit of sense and unapologetically offers no explanations. In fact, the only acknowledgment of such is the perpetual look of bemusement on the Student’s face as he is presented with another in a litany of incredulities as if he is the only one capable of perceiving just how utterly ridiculous it all is.

The set appears deliberately artificial and practically comes across like a live-action cartoon, a jet-black Looney Tune pulled from the mind of Sigmund Freud. Its spartan utilitarian design is relieved with the occasional splash of colour that emphasises its pointedly synthetic aesthetic, creating its own feigned perception of reality in its self-contained world, matching the nature of the bizarre characters who could not possibly exist anywhere else.

Amidst its relentless bizarreness, Der Bunker also has some comments to make about the inherently counter-intuitive education strategy of learning by rote, teaching children to retain facts required to pass exams without any reflection on the information being absorbed or incentive to retain it once its required academic purpose has expired. It also comments on the uptight nature of parents who are so set on conforming to societal norms that they become incapable of realising just how utterly screwed up they are, fostering unrealistic expectations on their children that allow them to live vicariously through their offspring’s potential success.

Der Bunker is gloriously demented and hilariously bizarre look at worryingly yet hilariously dysfunctional family and their perception of the outside world they can barely even remember. Driven by social commentary mixed with surreal black humour, it makes you question just how twisted you are for laughing all the while.

DER BUNKER / CERT: TBC / DIRECTOR: NIKIAS CHRYSSOS / SCREENPLAY:  NIKIAS CHRYSSOS / STARRING: PIT BUKOWSKI, DANIEL FRIPAN, OONA VON MAYDELL, DAVID SCHELLER / RELEASE DATE: TBC

Reviews you may like

Read More

reviews | 16/04/2018

EVERY DAY

Thirty years ago, Hollywood suddenly decided that body-swap films –  ...

View Article Read More

Share

reviews | 11/04/2018

BIG FISH & BEGONIA

Whilst Big Fish & Begonia is far from China’s first foray into the ...

View Article Read More

Share

  • EVERY DAY

    Thirty years ago, Hollywood suddenly decided that body-swap films -  in the realm of Disney’s classic 1976 Jodie Foster-starring comed...

    Read More
  • BIG FISH & BEGONIA

    Whilst Big Fish & Begonia is far from China’s first foray into the world of anime, the genre is still associated with Japan to the ...

    Read More

© Starburst Magazine - all rights reserved

  • Contact
  • Privacy