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Bubble

  • Director: Steven Soderbergh
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Tragedy, Americana
  • Themes: Workplace Romance, Small-Town Life, Murder Investigations
  • Main Cast: Debbie Doebereiner, Dustin Ashley, Misty Wilkins, Omar Cowan, Laurie Lee
  • Release Year: 2005
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 73 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Steven Soderbergh followed up his slick, star-studded sequel, Ocean's Twelve, with Bubble, a small-town drama about workers in a doll factory, played by a cast of unknowns. Martha (Debbie Doebereiner) seems to have acclimated herself to a very simple life. She works at the factory, where she eats lunch with a younger co-worker, Kyle (Dustin Ashley), and goes home to take care of her elderly father. Her routine is disrupted when an attractive young woman, Rose (Misty Wilkins), is hired at the factory to help them with the holiday rush. Rose soon tells the others that she's eager to leave their town, where there is "nothing to do." She immediately attracts Kyle's attention. One night, Rose asks Martha to baby-sit for her two-year-old daughter while she goes out on a date. Martha is startled to learn that her date is with Kyle. When Rose returns home that night, she's greeted by her angry ex-boyfriend, Jake (K. Smith), who accuses her of stealing from him. Martha looks on while Rose and Jake have a heated confrontation. The next morning, one of the characters is found murdered, and a detective (played by Decker Moody) begins to investigate. Bubble was written by Coleman Hough, who also scripted Soderbergh's Full Frontal. It was shown at the 2005 New York Film Festival, presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

Review

Although he is capable of flashy Hollywood entertainment like Ocean's Eleven and Erin Brockovich, Steven Soderbergh is an arthouse director at heart. Bubble, like his earlier films Schizopolis and Kafka, finds him at his most formally adventurous. Shot entirely on digital video with a cast of amateurs, the film offers a bleak portrait of a middle-age woman named Martha (Debbie Doebereiner) so used to her quiet life that she is unable to function when she experiences passionate feelings. The style of the film lets the audience feel the same day-to-day drudgery that the characters do, while the doll factory where they work offers just enough creepy images to offset the boredom. The performers are all flat, but they have been directed to be so. Soderbergh knows exactly what he is doing, and allows the viewer to fall into the unique pacing of the film and performances with ease. Since the plot is so simple it would be easy to think of Bubble as a case of style over substance, but as with most good films, the fact is the style informs the substance. With this haunting minor-key drama, Soderbergh once again shows that he is among the most cerebral and challenging American filmmakers of his era. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Debbie Doebereiner - Martha
  • Dustin Ashley - Kyle
  • Misty Wilkins - Rose
  • Omar Cowan - Martha's Dad
  • Laurie Lee - Kyle's Mother
David Hubbard - Pastor; Kyle Smith - Jake; Decker Moody - Detective Don; Steve Deem - Pawn Shop Owner; A. Paul Brooks, Jr. - Doctor; Daniel R. Christian - Factory Supervisor; Ross Clegg - CSI; Terrence V. Williams II - Officer Williams; Scott Smeeks - Officer Smeeks; Leonora K. Hornbeck - Shop Owner; Katherine Beaumier - Hairdresser; Dawn Hall - Nail Shop Owner; Joyce Brookhart - Martha's Niece; Amanda Massey - Waitress; Adam C. Anderson - Officer Anderson; Jeffrey R. Morris - Officer Morris

Credit

Steven Soderbergh - Director, Mary Ann Bernard - Editor, Joana Vicente - Executive Producer, Jason Kliot - Executive Producer, Mark Cuban - Executive Producer, Todd Wagner - Executive Producer, Robert Pollard - Composer (Music Score), Peter Andrews - Cinematographer, Greg Jacobs - Producer, Larry Blake - Sound/Sound Designer, Coleman Hough - Screenwriter

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Wikipedia: Bubble (film)
Top
Bubble
Directed by Steven Soderbergh
Produced by Gregory Jacobs
Written by Coleman Hough
Starring Debbie Doebereiner,
Dustin James Ashley,
Misty Dawn Wilkins
Music by Robert Pollard
Editing by Steven Soderbergh
Distributed by Magnolia Pictures
Release date(s) January 27, 2006
Running time 73 min.
Language English
Budget US$1,600,000

Bubble is a movie directed by Steven Soderbergh. It was shot on high-definition video and was made for a relatively small budget of $1.6 million. It also featured some unusual production aspects.

In traditional terms, the movie has no script. All lines were improvised according to an outline written by screenwriter Coleman Hough, who previously teamed with Soderbergh on Full Frontal. Bubble was also shot and edited by Soderbergh under the pseudonyms Peter Andrews and Mary Ann Bernard, respectively.

The film utilizes non-professional actors recruited from the Parkersburg, West Virginia / Belpre, Ohio area where the film was shot. Lead Debbie Doebereiner was found working the drive-through window in a Parkersburg KFC, for example.

Bubble was released simultaneously in movie theaters and on the cable/satellite TV network HDNet Movies on January 27, 2006. The DVD was released a few days later on January 31.

It was nominated for Best Director for Steven Soderbergh at the 2007 Independent Spirit Awards.

Bubble is the first of six films Soderbergh plans to shoot and release in the same manner.

The score for the movie was composed by Ohio native Robert Pollard.[1]

Plot summary

According to an Inc. Magazine article in January 2006, the film is a thriller that revolves around the murder of a young single mother who works at the "Lee Middelton" doll factory.

The movie is about three people living along the Ohio River who are just barely able to make ends meet. The first character is Martha (Debbie Doebereiner), a portly middle-aged woman getting ready for work and taking care of her elderly father. On the way to work at the doll factory she picks up her co-worker Kyle (Dustin James Ashley). He is probably Martha's only friend as she has to spend most of her time working and taking care of her father. Kyle is a tall, young man who is intensely shy and very quiet, although he does open up to Martha. In order to meet demand, the doll factory hires another worker, Rose (Misty Dawn Wilkins), an attractive single mother.

Martha appears to dislike Rose from the beginning, perhaps feeling threatened by Kyle staring at Rose. We learn that Rose has a two-year old daughter and that she used to work in a nursing home. Rose further irritates Martha when she asks Martha for a ride to her second job. We learn later that Martha found Rose "pushy" from the beginning.

Rose asks Martha if she would like to make a little extra money, as Rose has a date and will need a baby-sitter. Martha accepts but frames her response as if she is doing Rose the favor. It is not until Kyle arrives to pick Rose up that Martha learns the identity of Rose's date. Martha later confesses to Rose that this surprise made her feel like an idiot.

On the date we learn that both Kyle and Rose dropped out of high school, Kyle because he has social anxiety disorder and Rose because she wanted to rebel. Later in the date, at Kyle's house, Rose sifts through his drawers and steals some cash while Kyle is grabbing a couple of beers to drink. When Kyle drops Rose off at home, he refuses to go back inside because he felt a "weird vibe" from Martha earlier.

As soon as Rose enters her house, her ex-boyfriend (who is also the father of her child) barges in and accuses her of stealing money from his house. They get in a shouting match and he eventually leaves. Martha was sitting on the couch while they argued and after he leaves she asks Rose if that was her daughter's father. Rose angrily tells her to mind her own business.

The next morning the cops are at Rose's house and say that the neighbors found her dead with her baby crying. There is no sign of forced entry and it is apparently a murder because there are strangulation bruises on her neck. A detective questions Rose's ex-boyfriend and Kyle, both claiming to know nothing about the murder. During this time, Martha is pawning some of her family jewelry in order to afford some fishing equipment as a gift for Kyle. When she arrives at Kyle's house to give him the gift, she learns of Rose's murder. She is also surprised and claims to know nothing. Eventually the detective talks to her and she relates the same thing.

During a follow up interrogation the detective informs Martha that the fingerprints found around Rose's neck are indeed Martha's. The detective tells her to confess, as there is no doubt as to the murderer's identity. Martha maintains her innocence. As the story progresses, the detective visits Martha's father who is in the care of someone else (revealed in the credits to be Martha's niece). The detective informs Martha's shocked father of her arrest.

Kyle visits Martha in prison. As they sit with a glass wall between them, conversing on telephones, Martha pleads with Kyle to help her. She swears that she doesn't know what happened and that she did not murder Rose. Kyle appears wary of Martha and what has occurred. Later on, while in her jail cell, she sees herself in a vision standing over Rose's dead body as she mutters to herself "Oh my God".

  • In the deleted scenes there is an alternate ending where Martha has a CAT scan that shows a severely malignant tumor in her brain. The doctor explains that it is possible that the tumor could cause blackouts and very abnormal behavior.

References

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