The Arizona Republic

‘Dave Made a Maze’ is weirdly good

- BILL GOODYKOONT­Z

How would you describe a movie about a guy who builds a cardboard maze which takes on a life of its own and expands out of control while he and his friends are trapped inside?

Oh, and there’s a Minotaur in there. Of course there’s a Minotaur.

“Weird” is one word for it, and it certainly applies.

But so does “creative,” “inventive,” “compelling” and, finally, “good.” “Dave Made a Maze” is all of those things, a oneof-a-kind movie from director and cowriter Bill Watterson.

The story starts out simply enough. Annie (Meera Rohit Kumbhani) returns to the apartment she shares with her boyfriend, Dave (Nick Thune), after a trip. We know from a quick intro that he’s something of a slacker, and that he’s troubled by this and by how he’s tried to change it.

He’s built a maze. Or a labyrinth, if you like. In the living room. Out of cardboard. And now he is lost inside it.

Or so he tells Annie, who is understand­ably dubious and a little worried. But he won’t come out and won’t let her or anyone else come in — for their own safety, he says. Remember, the whole thing fits in the living room. And yet there is steam coming from the cardboard grates, and he sounds kind of far away, and. …

No. This is madness, right? Annie calls their friend Gordon (Adam Busch), who is sort of annoying in his bro-centric call-and-response friendship with Dave. But he doesn’t have much of an explanatio­n, either. And Dave is still lost inside.

Soon a crowd arrives, including Harry (James Urbaniak), who is a sort of nightmare version of a documentar­y filmmaker, both in how seriously he takes the job at the expense of all else and in how he … coaxes responses out of his subjects.

It’s all gloriously goofy, but Dave is still trapped inside, and he continues to insist that it’s too dangerous for anyone to come in and rescue him.

On the other hand, THE MAZE IS IN THE LIVING ROOM. Finally Annie decides she’s going in. And so does everyone else.

And the charmingly offbeat turns seriously strange and then veers into the absurd — in a good way. For the audience, anyway. For the rescuers, not so much. Turns out Dave wasn’t kidding about the danger. Though even potentiall­y graphic scenes are rendered as an acid-trip version of reality — yarn and Silly String stand in for blood and gore.

Oh, and the cardboard, the glorious cardboard — 30,000 square feet of it, reportedly. Once they’re inside the maze everything is rendered in cardboard, except when the characters turn into paper bags. (I can’t explain, not because I don’t want to spoil anything, but because there is no explanatio­n. That may seem like a

 ?? GRAVITAS VENTURES ?? Meera Rohit Kumbhani and Nick Thune star in "Dave Made a Maze."
GRAVITAS VENTURES Meera Rohit Kumbhani and Nick Thune star in "Dave Made a Maze."

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