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IMDbPro

Kaboom

  • 2010
  • 12
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Thomas Dekker and Juno Temple in Kaboom (2010)
Smith's everyday life in the dorm - hanging out with his arty, sarcastic best friend Stella, hooking up with a beautiful free spirit named London, lusting for his gorgeous but dim surfer roommate Thor - all gets turned upside-down after one fateful, terrifying night.
Play trailer2:18
1 Video
32 Photos
ComedyMysteryRomanceSci-FiThriller

A sexually "undeclared" college freshman's clairvoyant/prophetic dreams are the first sign that something very strange is going on involving his classmates -- with him at the center.A sexually "undeclared" college freshman's clairvoyant/prophetic dreams are the first sign that something very strange is going on involving his classmates -- with him at the center.A sexually "undeclared" college freshman's clairvoyant/prophetic dreams are the first sign that something very strange is going on involving his classmates -- with him at the center.

  • Director
    • Gregg Araki
  • Writer
    • Gregg Araki
  • Stars
    • Thomas Dekker
    • Haley Bennett
    • Chris Zylka
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gregg Araki
    • Writer
      • Gregg Araki
    • Stars
      • Thomas Dekker
      • Haley Bennett
      • Chris Zylka
    • 58User reviews
    • 176Critic reviews
    • 64Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Kaboom
    Trailer 2:18
    Kaboom

    Photos32

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    + 27
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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Thomas Dekker
    Thomas Dekker
    • Smith
    Haley Bennett
    Haley Bennett
    • Stella
    Chris Zylka
    Chris Zylka
    • Thor
    Roxane Mesquida
    Roxane Mesquida
    • Lorelei
    Juno Temple
    Juno Temple
    • London
    Andy Fischer-Price
    • Rex
    Nicole LaLiberte
    Nicole LaLiberte
    • Red-Haired Girl
    Jason Olive
    Jason Olive
    • Hunter
    James Duval
    James Duval
    • The Messiah
    Brennan Mejia
    Brennan Mejia
    • Oliver
    Kelly Lynch
    Kelly Lynch
    • Nicole
    Carlo Mendez
    Carlo Mendez
    • Milo
    Christine Nguyen
    Christine Nguyen
    • Freshman Bimbo
    Michael James Spall
    • Smith's Dad
    Sean Bresnahan
    • Surgeon
    • (uncredited)
    Brandy Futch
    Brandy Futch
    • Drug Fairy Nymph
    • (uncredited)
    Natalie Alyn Lind
    Natalie Alyn Lind
    • Cult Victim
    • (uncredited)
    Jen Mears
    Jen Mears
    • Student
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Gregg Araki
    • Writer
      • Gregg Araki
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews58

    5.714.2K
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    Featured reviews

    6tim-764-291856

    Donnie Darko on Viagra??

    That's how 'Kaboom' is billed on the DVD. I watched it, premiered on Film 4 last night.

    Initially I rather liked it, the striking design, the casual attitudes to almost everything and the dialogue. Especially the catty one-liners. I'm not familiar with this director and on the strength of this one movie, I'm not in a particular hurry to explore further, however.

    I realise that it's intended to be a surreal cult film and where it falls to pieces is where it starts to mess with your head, as it's just non-sensical and frankly, silly. I also realise that I'm not in the probable intended audience, age-wise. People running around in pig- headed masks just don't grab me, I'm afraid.

    The liberal, mixed sex scenes were both interesting and fun and the attitude that good sex is just that, refreshing. Most of the young cast play their parts well, especially Thomas Dekker, Haley Bennett and Juno Temple. I did watch it all and there were many good points and I enjoyed much of it, but ultimately, it's just too way out there.
    melvelvit-1

    Taking teen angst to apocalypse

    Gregg Araki's breakthrough film, 1992's THE LIVING END, was a gay THELMA & LOUISE in the age of AIDS, very cutting edge, and I thought he'd go much further than he did but, then again, big things were also predicted for John Dahl (RED ROCK WEST, THE LAST SEDUCTION) at the time. Oh, well. Anyway, Araki's been on the indie scene ever since and KABOOM takes his "apocalyptic teen angst" series (TOTALLY F***ED UP, THE DOOM GENERATION, NOWHERE, MYSTERIOUS SKIN) on a psychedelic roller coaster ride to a trippy -and inevitable- eve of destruction. It's a stylish (with vivid colors you can eat with a spoon), funny, sexy, college-set CLUELESS-on-acid that morphs into a cross between Sergio Martino's ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK and THE WIZARD OF OZ after a horny, existentialistic film student begins to realize he may be at the center of a global conspiracy with cataclysmic consequences. Fairly indescribable, free-wheeling sci-fi fun that'll leave you with a WTF? feeling. I liked it.
    7gradyharp

    Gregg Araki, Reigning Cinematic Iconoclast

    Gregg Araki continues his daring sojourn into the arena that other filmmakers avoid - frank sexual adventures of every kind, characters whose placement in the story is often like window dressing for effect, and yet out of it all comes a fascinating if at time discombobulating tale that appeals to a certain audience - and doesn't mind if the rest of the folks who don't approve of his antics even attend!

    The film follows the life of one Smith (Thomas Dekker) and his everyday life in the dorm - hanging out with his arty, sarcastic best friend Stella (Haley Bennett), hooking up with a beautiful free spirit named London (Juno Temple), lusting for his gorgeous but dim surfer roommate Thor (Chris Zylka). Smith parties, sleeps around with both men (Jason Olive, Andy Fischer-Price) and women in various combinations. He's bisexual, is about to turn 19 and is having strange dreams which seem to work their way into his life. There's gay sex, lesbian sex, witchcraft, men in animal masks, murder and some secret organization - it all gets turned upside-down after one fateful, terrifying night when all the signs of Smith's dreams seem to come together in a apocalyptic fusion that involves Smith's father (Michael James Spall), Smith's hedonistic mother (Kelly Lynch), and visits from the Messiah! It is a sci-fi story centered on the sexual awakening of a group of college students.

    Dekker somehow carries this film due to his skills as an actor but also his complete involvement in what is obviously Araki's secondary persona. It is a crazy film, rich in color, at many times ludicrous, and at other times very sexy - you know, the way Gregg Araki continues to make these solid little art house movies. It would be silly to fault KABOOM for being shallow or unserious; its whole mode of being is profoundly antiserious, playfully assaulting any form of earnestness other than Smith's emo melancholy.

    Grady Harp
    kdavies-69347

    An Irrelevant Event

    I've watched most of Greg Araki's films, weather online or by accident. In university I was directed to several of his movies, for his wild and outrageous plot-lines, and desolate themes of helplessness. I wouldn't call myself a fan, but I did enjoy the 90's drug escapade "Nowhere"(1997), which was a precursor to many well known stars of the early 2000 era. Araki leads viewers on a non-oriented vision of college life, complete with all the oddball events of his previous films, but ends up as a rather dull entry.

    For most of the movie the viewer is listening to our main character (known only as Smith), discuss the trials and tribulations of his young adult life. Bi-sexual, awkward, unfocused, and generally ignorant of other people around him, we are forced into his fantasies, absurd lifestyle, and unrealistic grip on reality. Sounds like fun right? Well, unfortunately you'd be wrong. The events that we witness unbearably forced, despite its unnatural and science-fiction theme. I felt most of the actors were just terribly strained and the unnatural dialogue between characters only draws attention to the situation. I think the actors were just terribly tedious in their delivery, and before long, I found there wasn't as single one that was believable.

    As with most drug riddled, and absurdist films, this movie has some interesting happenings. There is everything from serial killers to witchcraft here, and they certainly match Araki's usual plot-lines. Some are pretty amusing, and somewhat surreal, while others simply fall flat and actually take away from the enjoyment of the film. Several of them (if not most) have no significance to anything at all, and they leave you with the feeling that Araki is trying his hardest to stay relevant in his own way. I didn't mind the craziness, in fact, I was expecting it. However, by the end of the film, you find yourself more than confused (which is probably his goal in the first place).

    If you're a fan of Araki, you'll probably like this film very much. I didn't really think it had anything to offer besides that "WTF is happening" feeling he brings to movies. An irrelevant event with an abrupt ending.

    4/10
    chaos-rampant

    Colored strips

    If you want image and attitude this can be fun. If depth of vision, on the other hand, it will seem small.

    I'll have you imagine this as a guy with a bunch of comic-books and magazines on his floor, he cuts up strips and glues them together, now something about sex and college relationships, then a strip off Scooby- Do, another resembles Lynch, a third is about life on campus, then back to sex, more sex and obsession.

    He is from that 90s crop of makers (Tarantino, Smith) who thought that life had no business being seen as deeper than the way stuff just hang together, the fun in having so much stuff to pick from: movies, comic- books, TV. He briefly tried something more coherent in Mysterious Skin, here he's back to a collage.

    Two main thrusts here. One is the college journey of discovery, here he tries to paint a picture of sexual life, the confusion and reluctance - Nowhere was angsty, this is more relaxed in its skin, there's a sweetness around discovery. The second thrust is about mysterious happenings around campus, there are figures in animal masks who come out at night, a witch, a girl found dead. This is the more endearing part, all about how confusion in his mind around sexual identity manifests around campus as some inscrutable power of rearrange.

    It's all in the opening scene, a recurring dream where he walks down a corridor lined with girls and comes up against a mysterious door marked 18, his age: sex, dreams, locked mystery.

    It's fun for a while to see him do it, the fun all in the imaginative jumps from one strip to the next, in that it all loosely hangs together around a dream. But then it's as if he gets bored or can't see any point to it so he just keeps throwing stuff. A cult, the end of the world, a discovery about the father, more trysts, a car chase. None of it sticks, too much paper weight so it all just tumbles down in a heap of scraps. This is its own insight then on craft, if the patching doesn't begin to rise up into shape that guides the eye from forms to the possible thing they give rise to, it remains artless patchwork.

    Lynch also takes a lot of care in picking out cinematic wallpaper so it's seductive when you enter, but that's after he has mulled long and hard about where the walls are going to be and what kind of space they will define.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Inspired by a conversation Gregg Araki had with John Waters.
    • Quotes

      Stella: You meet some guy on a nude beach and after five minutes later you're downloading his hard drive in the back of a van? You're a slut.

    • Connections
      Featured in Ebert Presents: At the Movies: No Strings Attached/The Company Men/The Way Back/The Dilemma/The Green Hornet (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Saturday
      Written by Dan Whitford

      Performed by Cut Copy

      Courtesy of Universal Music Australia Pty. Ltd.

      Under license from Universal Music Enterprises

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 6, 2010 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site (France)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Gümmm
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Desperate Pictures
      • Wild Bunch
      • Super Crispy Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $118,919
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $13,714
      • Jan 30, 2011
    • Gross worldwide
      • $635,162
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 26 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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