The 5 quirkiest movies Iāve watched (that were actually good)
Not all low-budget and/or obscure films are created equal - below are five films to watch when youāre in the mood for something offbeat.
1. Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, Pedro Almodovar, 1988
Not the first Almodovar movie I had seen, but it was the first one I watched while drugged on Vicodin from my dentist appointment earlier that day. As it turns out, having a loose grip on reality only enhanced this amazing film. Carmen Maura plays Pepa, who bounces around Madrid chasing her two-timing (make that three-timing) boyfriend, Ivan. Itās a colorful romp full of coincidences and missed messages ā remember answering machines??? My favorite movie of all time with or without mild opiates.
2. The Good Girl, Miguel Arteta, 2002
Anyone who talks shit about Jennifer Anistonās acting cred needs to watch this movie. She plays a frumpy cashier in a shitty department store who shakes up her boring life by having an affair with Jake Gyllenhaalās much younger character. John C. Reilly is the cuckolded husband. A solid indie that never veers into Lifetime Movie territory thanks to simple comic situations amidst heavy melodrama. When you get to the part where sheās feeding him the berries, trust me, youāre going to laugh. And then about ten minutes after that youāre going to cry.
3. My Beautiful Laundrette, Stephen Frears, 1985
Before Brokeback Mountain there was this British film about an ambitious Indian man who opens up a kick-ass Laundromat with his English lover (played by Daniel Day Louis). Pretty ahead of its time compared to the rest of Gay cinema in the 1980ās (or any decade preceding if you think about it) ā these dudes were in LOVE and the actors made it palpable.
4. Kinky Boots, Julian Jerrold, 2005
The story of a failing shoe factory and itās reluctant savior, played by a geeky, de-hunked Joel Edgarton. Instead of making boring shoes for boring people, the workers come together to fashion womenās shoes ā for transvestite men. The idea comes from Chiwetel Ejioforās giant manliness crushing the heels of dainty womenās pumps. Itās predictable, and gooey-sweet at times, but the British accents and unusual circumstances dress up an otherwise predictable plot.Ā Based on true events.
5. The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, Luis Bunuel, 1972
Possibly the quirkiest film of all time (while still entertaining and re-watchable). Nobody can really explain this movie and if they try, theyāre full of shit. Itās a comedy, itās a farce, itās like a crazy-long SNL skit that you actually donāt want to end. Itās Da-Da to the 100th power, but itās also a moral statement. Just seriously watch it. If you canāt find it Iāll burn you a copy. I think Bunuel would be cool with that.