"Wobble Palace" is the name of the home that Eugene and Jane share in Los Angeles, its interior of astro turf, bright colors and more designed mostly by Jane, an artist. They share a bed on some nights, but Kotlyarenko's movie focuses on two days, (with the 2016 election drawing near) in which they both have access to the house and its bedroom.
Kotlyarenko is sincere with the core emotions of his distant couple, which allows him and Nekrasova to have some fun in their respective leading halves of the film. Eugene is a disheveled, aggressively quirky guy who dresses for his hook-ups like a demented children’s show host, his long hair even used as a type of prop. He proclaims to the women he interacts with on October 30, 2016 that he’s progressive and not pushy, but his interactions with women are pointed toward the type of person he really is; selfish, entitled, obnoxious in no revelatory way. As a director, this puts the story into territory that seems to be ironic about being ironic, especially as it settles into tone and allows the viewer to get a better feel for the film's overall perspective. But along with some rough acting, this chunk of the story can have the slightness and lip-service nature of a contemporary “Saturday Night Live” skit, where calling out faux-woke dudes leaves more cleverness to be desired.
But “Wobble Palace” picks up and flies when it focuses on Jane’s story on October 31, 2016, as she has her own interests as an artist who has seemingly worked all kinds of jobs, but is stuck in more ways than one. She has compelling conversations with her friend Marcello (Elisha Drons) and charming interactions with a hook-up named Ravi (Vishwam Velandy); among goofing around and various usages of their phones like FaceTime or sending nudes, "Wobble Palace" touches upon culturally specific ideas without being on-the-nose. All the while, her story becomes more universal and timeless about the ache of relationships and meeting new people, but it isn’t cliche given how specific it feels to 2016.
There is an ambition to “Wobble Palace” that unfolds as it goes along, as it wants to be about so much that is relevant today: the true meaning behind terms like “basic,” “cuck,” “triggered,” “negging”; the viciousness of dating apps; the responsibilities that are and aren’t expected of Millenials; gentrification; cisgender heterosexual male feminism; the impending election of Donald Trump. Even if some ideas are handled with more poignancy than others (the pre-Trump setting is one of its least effective), they pack the movie to keep it compelling, as if engaging in the many inner debates its viewers were already having before the movie started.
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