Last night I settled in and watched Heretic Film’s newly released DVD of Michael Ferris Gibson’s Numb, a film that originally hit theatres, albeit in a limited fashion, four years ago in 2003. Such a broad span of time between a film’s theatrical release and its subsequent emergence on DVD is unusual, until you become aware of the fact that the story of Numb is one that spans the length of a decade.
Principal photography began, you see, in 1996 on the main portion of the film, which was the black and white footage, with the super-saturated color footage being filmed nearly seven years later. Adding to the surrealism of the film’s finally being released on DVD for audiences to enjoy, of course, is the fact that the film’s leads have retired from their acting careers during the passing years, despite their more-than-capable efforts in the film.
Having researched all of this before even unwrapping the DVD, it certainly made me wonder whether the film I was about to watch should have been something that Heretic Films even bothered to bring again to the light of day. Everything else seemed to indicate that the film was simply fated to fading away, so maybe that’s what it should have been gracefully allowed to do. Right?
Wrong.
From the first few fragmented moments of film and imagery to caress my eyes and my television screen, all the way through the starkness of the film’s content and visual style, Numb had me rooted to my chair. What’s strange, though, was that it achieved this effect by unexpected means.
It wasn’t because I was so drawn into the story that I simply couldn’t leave. No, that would have been something that I could easily have dealt with. Instead, the story drove on into dark and damned confusing corridors and forced me to follow it until it reached the end, else I fear that I’d have always been trapped in its dark labyrinth of a story.
In the future, you see, the world is in the grip of an unnamed disease that has driven humanity to the brink of desperation. Clair (Jennifer West Savitch) is a woman driven to find her scientist father who abandoned her and her brother several years earlier, who is also the man who developed a serum called “the Drip” that keeps the disease at bay for those who use it constantly.








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