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9/10
A Post Apocalyptic Awkward Feeler
ShortoftheWeek5 March 2008
The post apocalyptic sub-genre is a particularly fitting one for short film. Figure: With almost everyone dead, there's not a whole lot going on. Most of the features taking place in these dim tomorrows could have their plots reduced to ten minutes. A majority of the run times are used up by guys in BDSM-gear driving dune buggies across ruined landscapes.

Genesis Antipode, produced, written, and directed by American J.R. Robinson in New Zealand, takes the post apocalyptic story to its character-driven basics. There's a man and a woman, and the rest of the world is dead. Too bad she despises him. Told in two timelines, the human race is no more when the film begins. Jeffrey and Rebecca stay close to each other, outside of the city for fear of what may lie there. They had met before the fall of civilization, on a blind date. He was her intellectual superior, but in every other way, he lagged behind. Rebecca, an attractive, social woman, was repulsed by his inability to grasp even basic cultural norms. However Jeffrey, a dweebish scientist, thought things had gone swimmingly. He learns otherwise, and then everyone else dies.

This is one of the most compelling visions of a destroyed world you'll find on film. It's not exciting, but with believable acting and a far too believable situation, it sticks in your brain. Genesis Antipode is both depressing and relaxing. Is there hope in its suggested future? That's up to you to decide. It presents two people in the most awkward of situations and lets the audience imagine what they would do in their place.
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