Bubble Boy (2001)

reviewed by
Robin Clifford


"Bubble Boy"

Jimmy Livingston (Jake Gyllenhaal) was born without immunities and, when he was released from the hospital at age four, his mom (Swoozie Kurtz) spirited him home in a protective, antiseptic bubble. Since then she has been his mommy and muse and has shielded the germ-imperiled boy from the dangers of the world - especially the "little slut" (mom's words) next door, Chloe (Marley Shelton). Despite mom's objections Jimmy falls in love with pretty, sweet Chloe and when she decides to marry another in Niagara Falls, he creates a portable bubble and hits the road to find her in "Bubble Boy."

Words that come to mind after watching "Bubble Boy" are politically incorrect, subversive and anarchistic. Considering that this film springs from the loins of parent company, Disney, I am amazed that it even got released. The flick pokes fun at religion, motherhood, cults, freaks, masturbation, immune systems (AIDS?) and more. But, my amazement is a good thing, though, when it comes to a comedy that has the gonads to thumb its nose in the face of convention. Because of this subversion, though, the movie may suffer at the box office. I hope not.

For all his mother's interference and his plight of being without normal immunities, Jimmy is a normal, well-adjusted young guy with needs, desires and interests commensurate with almost any American teenager. He plays rock music on his guitar and has a very normal interest in the newly moved in girl next door, Chloe. That he lives in a sterile, habitrail-style environment and his mom still reads him bedtime stories (although her fairytales always end with the hero leaving his protective environment and dying) don't deter him from ordinary emotions. He and Chloe become best friends, but, without the ability to have physical contact, she soon starts dating a rock star wannabe, Mark (Dave Sheridan), and, eventually, decides to marry the sleazy guy - in Niagara Falls, thousands of miles away from Jimmy's home in Palmdale, CA.

With the impromptu wedding only days away, Jimmy makes the life-threatening decision to leave his safe, sterile habitat and go find Chloe to declare his love. Being an intelligent, capable young guy, he builds himself a portable bubble and hits the road. His adventure begins at a bus stop in the middle of nowhere run by a less than friendly, deadpan attendant (Zach Galifianakis). He is given a ride on a bus with the logo "Bright and Shiny" (read "Up With People") only to be thrown out when he innocently calls his generic looking companions (all named Todd and Lorraine) a cult. (Super male model Fabio makes a cameo appearance as their leader.) From there he meets and helps a surly biker named Slim (Danny Trejo) with a flat tire. ("Patches?" says Slim. "I could use some stinking patches!" in homage to "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre.") Jimmy's adventures continue as he slowly treks across the land and he teams up with the members of a circus freak show led by a nasty little guy named Dr. Phreak (Vern Troyer). An East Indian (Brian George) driving an ice cream and curry van gives B-Boy a ride and his faith is sorely tested, to gross out effect. Meanwhile, his overly protective mom and his dad also hit the road in search of their wayward boy, crossing the same paths as their son.

There has been a lot of flack over the shots that "Bubble Boy" takes at the various targets and sacred cows of our society. Religion, whether it be Christianity, the Hindu faith or Judaism, is fired upon frequently and with verve in the script by Cinco Paul and Ken Daurio. This alone seems to offend troves of people. I guess some individuals have a problem with politically incorrect satire. The use of circus freaks is being construed as mean spirited, but these misshapen folk are good and caring (and, yes, funny) characters, much the same way Alfred Hitchcock depicted them in "Saboteur" (1942). Of course, no one gave Hitch any grief, but the present, politically correct world we live in takes offense over showing others less fortunate.

Jake Gyllenhaal ("October Sky") is dead on as the title boy and, with his dramatic rather than comedic background, anchors the comedy with an earnest stalwartness that, say, someone like Brendan Fraser may not have conveyed. Jimmy is resourceful, capable and kind and so in love with Chloe (a charming performance by pretty Marley Shelton) that he'll risk his very life just to hold her. It's a sweet perf in a goofy, coming of age road movie. Swoozie Kurtz is near evil as Jimmy's dominant mom, but the veteran actress gives her character a caring personality, if only when it comes to her son. The plethora of character actors filling out the roles of the wild and wacky people Jimmy meets do yeoman's work and help contribute to the subversive comedy. You might recognize a face or two with vet Danny Trejo ("Con Air") and Verne Troyer (Mini Me in "Austin Powers 2") doing their bit.

Commercial director Blair Hayes makes his debut and keeps the pace brisk but not hurried. Running about 90 minutes, it's the right length, to my mind, for a screwball comedy and "Bubble Boy" exerts its right to satire very well. Maybe I'm just thick skinned but I was not the least bit offended by the offbeat humor, which pushes the envelope of good taste. I think it walked the line admirably well for a lightweight summer comedy. I guess it's all a matter of how you look at things. If you're the kind of person offended by a film like "Bubble Boy" just say no and go see something else. I, personally, like anarchy and give it a B-.

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