The Niagara Falls Review

Stuber is a cinematic car wreck

- KATIE WALSH

There is absolutely no reason to catch a ride with the nasty, brutish and shrill “Stuber,” a horror movie about our current American nightmare of late capitalist economics and unchecked law enforcemen­t masqueradi­ng as an “action comedy.” If that’s not sobering enough, “Stuber,” written by Tripper Clancy and directed by Michael Dowse, is also deeply unfunny. It centres on the odd-couple pairing of Kumail Nanjiani and Dave Bautista, who try to cover up their complete lack of chemistry with increasing­ly deafening screams.

You know what’s just a laugh riot? Consider that the hero of our film, the titular “Stuber,” Stu (Nanjiani), drives Uber on the side because he doesn’t make enough at his low-wage gig at a big box sporting goods store. You know what’s even funnier? When he’s kidnapped by an off-duty LAPD officer, Vic (Bautista), who is on a vengeance mission and conscripts Stu into the torture and murder of civilians. Ha. Ha. Ha. Those murderous off-duty LAPD officers sure are hilarious.

It’s a busted, blatant, bumbling rip-off of Michael Mann’s “Collateral,” but rather than a smooth assassin and a panicked cabbie, it’s a rogue cop with impaired vision due to LASIK surgery and a motor-mouth sweetie behind the wheel of a leased Nissan Leaf.

In throwing together sensitive beta Stu and the testostero­nefuelled Vic, “Stuber” is trying to say something about the hot topic of toxic masculinit­y (aren’t we all?), but it has its cake and eats it too. Stu might yell at Vic to talk about his feelings or being a better father, and yes, he does call out just how illegal everything Vic does that day, repeatedly. But for every one of these moments, there’s a scene where Stu learns to “man up” by becoming violent himself, shedding his compassion, empathy and respect for human life.

If a film is going to be actionpack­ed and violent, it should have the decency to at least present it well. The cinematogr­aphy and editing is incoherent and not compelling.

Stu shrieks every story point, so even watching this grating and pointless film, filled with boneheaded plot twists, is utterly unrewardin­g.

Save the Uber fare and stay far, far away.

 ?? MARK HILL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dave Bautista, left, and Kumail Nanjiani in "Stuber:" grating, pointless and filled with boneheaded plot twists.
MARK HILL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dave Bautista, left, and Kumail Nanjiani in "Stuber:" grating, pointless and filled with boneheaded plot twists.

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