đŹ Detailed Review: The Bad Batch (2016)
Movie Overview
Title: The Bad Batch
Release Date: September 6, 2016 (Venice Film Festival), limited US release June 23, 2017
Genre: Dystopian thriller / Drama
Director: Ana Lily Amirpour
Cast: Suki Waterhouse (Arlen), Jason Momoa (Miami Man), Keanu Reeves (The Dream), Jim Carrey (Hermit), Giovanni Ribisi
Where to Watch: Netflix, Fandango at Home, Amazon/iTunes
1. Plot Summary
In a near-future Texas, lawless wastelands have become dumping grounds for the âundesirablesâ â the eponymous âbad batch.â Arlen (Suki Waterhouse) is exiled beyond a border fence and immediately captured by cannibals who amputate her arm and leg. Miraculously surviving via sheer will, she is rescued by a mute hermit (Jim Carrey) and brought to Comfort, a bizarre commune led by a charismatic cult figure known as The Dream (Keanu Reeves). As she tries to rebuild her life with prosthetics, she crosses paths with Miami Man (Jason Momoa), a ruthless cannibal searching for his kidnapped daughter. Their unlikely bonds and intertwined destinies unfold against the surreal backdrop of this desert dystopia.
2. Notable Elements
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Striking Imagery & Cinematography: Lyle Vincent’s lensing captures the haunting beauty of desolate landscapes contrasted against neon-lit communes and rave scenes. One unforgettable shot features Arlenâs smiley-face shorts creeping through dusty tracksâbold, symbolic, and bizarre.
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Opening Shock: The visceral first 15 minutesâamputation, survival skateboarding, escapeâset a harrowing tone with emotional resonance and immediate stakes.
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Eclectic Soundtrack: ’80s alt-pop interwoven with edgy beats heightens the surreal, almost satirical feel; quirky needle drops like âKarma Chameleonâ juxtapose violence and absurdity.
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Memorable Performances:
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Waterhouse embodies Arlen with gritty resilience and emotional depth.
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Reeves — in white suit and deadpan delivery — acts as the cult leader The Dream, offering dark humor and irony.
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Momoa is both savage and surprisingly tender in his portrayal of Miami Man.
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3. Themes and Messages
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Survival & Identity: The film interrogates what humanity looks like when basic ethics are stripped awayâblurring distinctions between predator and protector.
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Culture & Power: Comfort indulges in Commodified freedomâcelebrity-like cult leaders, recreational drugs, women in concubine rolesâoffering a critique on utopias gone wrong.
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Redemption & Connection: Arlen and Miami Man share unlikely empathy and bond over loss and survival, offering a spark of hope in a dystopian void.
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Holiday Relevance: Its communal yet surreal portrayal of Comfort could metaphorically echo festive gatherings where appearances mask deeper dysfunctionsâprompting reflection on genuine human connection.
4. Personal Impressions
Strengths:
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Visually audacious and tonally daringâthis movie is not afraid to surprise.
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Exceptional world-building through aesthetics and mood.
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Compelling performances from the main trio, especially those emotionally resonant and human.
Weaknesses:
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The narrative wavers, particularly in the second act when the search for a child replaces allegorical power dynamics, leading to a drift in thematic intensity.
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Could feel disjointed or self-indulgentâstylish vignettes donât always coalesce into a cohesive arc.
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Pacing issues: compelling first act, but later passages slow the momentum too much. Critics noted that it ânever organizes itself around a coherent ideaâ and âruns out of steamâ with 90 minutes remaining.
Overall, I admire its boldness and tonal experimentation, though I found myself craving tighter focus and narrative cohesion.
5. Audience Recommendations
For you if you enjoy:
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Offbeat dystopian cinema (Mad Max-style survival with surreal flair)
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Stylish arthouse with dark humor and aesthetic grit
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Cult favorites that challenge conventional storytelling
Maybe skip if you prefer:
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Tightly plotted, high-concept sci-fi thrillers
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Linear narratives or mainstream blockbusters
6. Conclusion & Rating
The Bad Batch is as beautiful as it is brutalâan ambitious, genre-blending film that delivers unforgettable visuals, intense performances, and surreal storytelling. It stumbles when its disjointed themes lose clarity, but for viewers who appreciate style-layered substance and bold experimentation, it remains a memorable entry in modern dystopian cinema.
Rating: âď¸âď¸âď¸ââŻâ (3.5/5)