The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
‘Ruben Brandt, Collector’ should be more fun than it is
The film looks good, but has a nonsensical plot.
The feature debut of gifted Hungarian animator Milo- rad Krstic, “Ruben Brandt, Collector” is a wild, inventive ride through the unconscious, by way of Art History 101 and An Introduc- tion to Film Tropes. The story of a famous psycho- analyst struggling with his Oedipal demons with the help of some hardened burglars isn’t a story at all, really, but a decidedly rick- ety scaffold on which Krstic can hang his images, an array of ecstatic references to the painters and directors who have inspired him.
It’s made clear that Quentin Tarantino is one of them, not just in a quote from the dance scene in “Pulp Fiction” but in Krstic’s frenetic mag- pie style, which pingpongs restlessly between the car chases and nail-biting stunts of classic action films to the femmes fatales and sleepyeyed nihilism of film noir. We meet Dr. Ruben Brandt on a train (hallo, Dr. Freud!), where he is being terrorized by dark visions and imagined endangerments. Krstic then zooms over to Paris, where a sleekly glamorous cat bur- glar named Mimi drives her snazzy red Mercedes con- vertible like a cross between Steve McQueen and a brunette even more long-legged Charlize Theron.
Mimi’s path eventually crosses with Dr. Brandt’s — a hot-air balloon is involved, for some reason — a nd “Ruben Brandt, Collector” begins to center on a grand plot to cure his obsession with certain works of art by indulging it completely and nefariously.
Overplotted, convoluted and self-consciously weird, “Ruben Brandt, Collector” takes viewers on a whirligig tour through a carefully aestheticized dreamscape, with Krstic playfully re-creating works by Velázquez, Manet, Gauguin and Warhol, and with his own style evoking Fernando Botero, Otto Dix and — when it comes to his penchant for giving characters one or two extra eyes — Pablo Picasso.
It becomes something of a parlor game to spot every reference in a neverending shuffle of winks, nods and homages. Then it becomes tiresome to try to follow a nonsensical plot and coequal obsessions with sex, death and art. Some- thing this larky should be swifter and more compact; instead, “Ruben Brandt, Collector” feels like a sneakily pretentious pastiche, and not much else.