The Mother of Invention (2009) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
"I'll never give up because Vincent never gave up"
Bernie444422 March 2024
This is a mockumentary of young Vincent (Andy Bowser) a would-be-inventor who seems to be shy one cup and saucer from the set. All his life he has been out invented by people that give away jellybeans and pizza. This time he is not about to be out invented. This is his last year, and he is going to show people what he can do.

This is not a mockumentary about inventions but the integrity of the inventors, their dreams and those of the people they choose to help them. Can we relate to Vincent's quest, and will he finally succeed?

This film is a low budget and it shows. They are experimenting with dialogue, and it shows. Their timing is extremely excruciatingly and infuriatingly slow. I mean slow. However, I thank them for their effort; yet I do not think this presentation is gonna be on the top of any list.

My invention will be a fizzy caffeine pill to put in all those caffeine free drinks.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Brave Little Movie
heathfilmore1 October 2023
Making a film today is hard, especially quirky and thoughtful ones. The story was intriguing, the acting top-notch, art and cinematic direction was also better than expected. It's a brave little movie willing to stretch the envelope while staying believable. Bowers is a mix of. Jason Schwartzman and Bruce McCulloch with a drop of Crispin Glover lunacy around the edges, while Jimmi Simpson has traces of early James Spader creepiness. Look quick and see Chris Hardwick in a cameo, too. Not a bad or off performance in the movie. Dee Wallace shines as the mother and. Mark Boone is great in a droll performance as is Kevin Corrigan. Give it a try.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Solid Indie effort
screamingfoot11 December 2010
When I first saw the Vincent Dooly audition tape a year and a half ago, I had no idea that was an actor, acting. I mean, I suspected it, as one must do these days, but Andrew Bowser's performance in it as a quirky, wannabe inventor talking to the camera as a hopeful subject of The Mother of Invention documentary - is palpable.

The Mother of Invention is similarly palpably entertaining as so many films try to be.

The balance achieved in casting as well as the thoughtful direction and editing renders the performances and the writing in the best possible light, with Bowser bringing the plight of goofball inventor Vincent Dooly to the screen not as a cartoon character, not as a one-note schtick artist, and (thankfully) not as a series of tiresome improv.

There IS a delicate balance achieved with respect to the story of Vincent Dooly (inventor) that never veers too far into silly territory, and never too far into poignant-land, all the while weaving poignancy and silliness into a compelling Indie effort that had me with it until the very end.

The entire cast should also be commended for their effort and I thank them for not throwing the lines out, phoning their performances in, or letting ego get in the way of the story and the film.

This film, obviously a low budget Indie effort is about as good an effort as I've seen in recent years, and I sincerely hope it can invent an audience for itself, because it deserves one.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Potential wasn't realised
je-remy14 April 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Despite it's budget this film is fine in terms of a lot of the elements of film making. Visually, sets, costume, and much of the acting were good. It also had potential in terms of it's plot. But it sunk on several fundamentals.

Most importantly, I lost any sympathy I might have had for the main character when he delivered his self-centered rant on being rejected by the cafe girl. I really wanted to bail out at that point. An obnoxious character is not one I'm going to root for. The movie sinks irredeemably with that scene.

A movie about an inventor also NEEDS some ingenious inventions - not the one's we've all already heard of.

Then there was slowness. A lot of the scenes dragged on for far too long. Too much hanging around on someone's face with nothing happened except them pulling expressions - no story value there.

It was absent of a lot of the cleverness and humor I was hoping for. Had it been actualised a lot better this could have been a cult movie - instead it misses it by a million miles.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Tedious, painfully tedious
CameronWoods10 December 2012
The only positive thing I could possibly say is that it only takes twenty minutes to watch the last three quarters of the film on high speed fast forward.

I almost chuckled at the hat, but not quite. Not funny for a single moment. Repeating the same action, that wasn't funny the first time, fifteen times made it painful to watch.

I only watched this to see Kendall Ryan Sanders as his performance in Criminal Minds was simply stunning but he was only in this for two minutes and nothing that could show any of his superb talent. It is quite a tragedy that this fine young actor has so much trouble getting a role worthy of him.

Complete waste of time, couldn't be more disappointed.
3 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed