Memories of 1980s and 1990s video store culture will draw viewers of a certain age to The Last Blockbuster, Taylor Mordenโs breezy, goofy documentary on the king of the corporate movie renting business. Long since destroyed by on-demand ease and streaming subscriptions, there was a time when millions โmade it a Blockbuster nightโ before the harsh reality check of technology and a handful of bad decisions relegated the brand to punchline status. Accordingly, the filmโs home on Netflix provides a level of irony partially addressed in the movieโs overview of Blockbusterโs spectacular decline.
Alongside the historical bullet points, Morden relies heavily on talking head interviews with an odd assortment of industry professionals including Kevin Smith, Ione Skye, Jamie Kennedy, Brian Posehn and several others. Many of the comments are the kind of earnest and heartfelt personal observations that will remind viewers of their own trips to pick out movies. Too often, however, the tongue-in-cheek tone veers into the empty calorie territory of VH1โs cable television time-filler I Love the โ80s, as subjects like Doug Benson and Ron Funches canโt resist using their screen time to test what feels like standup material.
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Morden has much better luck with central subject Sandi Harding, the manager of the worldโs only surviving Blockbuster store, located in Bend, Oregon. Affable, smart, practical and positive, Harding is as dynamic as any of the on-camera โcelebritiesโ rounded up by Morden and writer Zeke Kamm. In the hands of a different filmmaking team, one imagines that Hardingโs story alone would have been enough to carry a feature-length story. Itโs fascinating to follow Harding as she fills her Target shopping basket with new DVD and Blu-ray releases that will soon be made available on her rental shelves.
Blockbusterโs business plan, which used database software that helped streamline store-franchising replicability, buried thousands of unique mom-and-pop video rental shops during the peak of the companyโs mid-2000s brick-and-mortar dominance. Morden doesnโt entirely ignore this foul stain, but he fails in any meaningful or sustained way to fully explore and engage the dark side of Blockbusterโs monopoly. A brief but welcome appearance by salty Troma Entertainment curmudgeon Lloyd Kaufman at least calls out the chilling effect of Blockbusterโs sanitized and family-friendly product policy on independents and boutique labels.
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As the latest addition to the growing subgenre of documentaries about home videoโs tumultuous and exciting journey, The Last Blockbuster fleshes out one more chapter in the saga that includes recent takes like The Last Video Store and At the Video Store, as well as Rewind This! and Adjust Your Tracking. Despite frequent and persistent predictions that physical media will eventually disappear — an idea reiterated at least once in The Last Blockbuster — the strength and popularity of collecting and the will to find and see movies that would never have been carried by a Blockbuster in the first place is reflected in the ongoing work of the Criterion Collection, Vinegar Syndrome, Arrow Video, Shout! Factory, Kino Lorber, Olive Films, the American Genre Film Archive, Anchor Bay, Blue Underground, Severin Films and many other keepers of the flame.
Will we ever see a widespread return to video rental spaces where people interact face-to-face as they discover new cinematic adventures, make connections and invite chance recommendations that cannot be replicated by algorithms? Time will tell.
Greg Carlson (@gcarlson1972) is an associate professor of communication studies and the director of the interdisciplinary film studies minor program at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota. He is also the film editor of the High Plains Reader, where his writing has appeared since 1997.
Categories: 2020s, 2021 Film Reviews, Documentary, Featured, Film Reviews

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