Superpowerless (film)

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Superpowerless
Directed byDuane Andersen
Written byDuane Andersen
Dominic Mah
Produced byDuane Andersen
Yukie Hashimoto
Alun Lee
StarringJosiah Polhemus
Amy Prosser
Natalie Lander
Guinevere Turner
Pepe Serna
H.P. Mendoza
CinematographyBill Otto
Edited byDuane Andersen
Dave Boyle
Music bySarah Saturday
Production
company
Brainwave Films
Distributed byFirst Pond Entertainment
Release date
  • July 24, 2016 (2016-07-24) (Fantasia International Film Festival)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Superpowerless is a 2016 American feature film and the feature directorial debut of

Palo Alto. The film premiered in July 2016 at the Fantasia International Film Festival and was released in the Fall of 2017 by First Pond Entertainment.[1][2]

Plot

Bob (Josiah Polhemus) is a typical, frustrated forty-something guy. He spends his days wandering and drinking. The more help he is offered the more frustrated he becomes. One might think that his situation is typical of millions of others who have suffered a sense of loss and a frustrating lack of purpose once they reach forty. But Bob is a bit different... Bob used to be Captain Truth, a masked superhero fighting crime throughout the Bay Area. Now, however, he's just Bob, and it's hard to get used to.

Mimi (Amy Prosser), Bob's girlfriend, is facing her own challenges. Years ago she dreamed of moving to Rome and becoming a museum curator, but now she finds herself as an assistant in a law firm, with the chance for a lucrative promotion. As her future takes shape, she wonders if it's the future she really wants.

Mimi encourages Bob to write a book, in an effort to soothe his mind and put things into perspective. He hires Danniell (Natalie Lander), a college English major, to help him get his thoughts down cohesively. She thinks Bob's book is worth publishing, and has her eyes set on Bob himself. As Bob and Danniell's relationship blossoms, Bob is tempted to risk losing Mimi, the one thing in his life that makes any sense.

Meanwhile, Mimi discovers that she's pregnant. Bob has always been insistent that he didn't want kids, and with a potential new promotion, and her relationship with Bob deteriorating, she wonders if giving up the child might be the smartest thing.

They both struggle as they learn that the best way to make the future worthwhile is to live the current moment as if it's the most important of all.

References

  1. Screen Daily
    .
  2. ^ Harvey, Dennis (August 6, 2016). "Film Review: Superpowerless". Variety.

External links