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IMDbPro

Trash Humpers

  • 2009
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
5.9K
YOUR RATING
Harmony Korine and Rachel Korine in Trash Humpers (2009)
Make it! Make it! Don't fake it! From his directorial debut 'Gummo,' to his new film 'The Beach Bum,' writer and director Harmony Korine has plunged audiences into his unique, decadent worlds filled with out-of-control characters.
Play clip2:15
Watch A Guide to the Films of Harmony Korine
2 Videos
91 Photos
Dark ComedyMockumentaryComedyDramaHorror

Follows the lives of a small group of elderly sociopaths in Nashville, Tennessee.Follows the lives of a small group of elderly sociopaths in Nashville, Tennessee.Follows the lives of a small group of elderly sociopaths in Nashville, Tennessee.

  • Director
    • Harmony Korine
  • Writer
    • Harmony Korine
  • Stars
    • Rachel Korine
    • Brian Kotzur
    • Travis Nicholson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    5.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Harmony Korine
    • Writer
      • Harmony Korine
    • Stars
      • Rachel Korine
      • Brian Kotzur
      • Travis Nicholson
    • 46User reviews
    • 78Critic reviews
    • 33Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos2

    Trash Humpers
    Trailer 1:19
    Trash Humpers
    A Guide to the Films of Harmony Korine
    Clip 2:15
    A Guide to the Films of Harmony Korine
    A Guide to the Films of Harmony Korine
    Clip 2:15
    A Guide to the Films of Harmony Korine

    Photos91

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    Top cast15

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    Rachel Korine
    Rachel Korine
    • Momma
    Brian Kotzur
    • Buddy
    Travis Nicholson
    Travis Nicholson
    • Travis
    Harmony Korine
    Harmony Korine
    • Hervé
    Seth Peterson
    Kevin Guthrie
    Kevin Guthrie
    • Plak
    Charles Ezell
    • Twin
    Crystal
    Jennifer
    Roxxie
    Page Spain
    Chris Gantry
    • Singer
    Chris Crofton
    Chris Crofton
    Paul Booker
    Dave Cloud
    • Director
      • Harmony Korine
    • Writer
      • Harmony Korine
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    4.95.8K
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    Featured reviews

    4sol-

    Garbage Day

    Three vagrants in Halloween masks spend their nights humping rubbish bins and their days befriending likeminded individuals in this quizzical comedy from Harmony Korine. Whereas Korine's latter 'Spring Breakers' is a remarkable film that gradually reveals itself to be anything but what one would expect from its title, promotional posters and opening shots of bikini-clad beachgoers, 'Trash Humpers' is a film that delivers exactly one would expect from the title, posters and opening shots. Any semblance of plot is near non-existent here as the trio simply engage in strange and depraved behaviour for the whole 78 minute duration. Some of their mischief is admittedly memorable, such as making two flatmates eat pancakes covered in dishwashing liquid and teaching a well-dressed boy about various pranks, but the vast majority of the film comes off as extremely repetitive due to the very limited plot. It does not help that the film looks unappealing too, shot and edited on grainy VHS with large bouts of video interference. With their high pitched squealing and cackling laughs, the characters are additionally grating to follow around. It is easy enough to appreciate what Korine is trying to do here, presenting three individuals who manage to find enjoyment and fulfillment in life while defying social conventions. There is also a lot to like in the idea to shoot the film on VHS to give the material a found footage appearance, however, whether all this makes for a film that is entertaining, enlightening or at least engaging is highly debatable.
    6Stay_away_from_the_Metropol

    TRASH HUMPERS humps trash art while laughing maniacally

    I saw TRASH HUMPERS at a screening in L.A. where Harmony Korine was there to introduce it and also do a Q&A afterwards.

    I was wildly disappointed with the lame array of questions that were thrown at him. Probably 90% were brainless, pointless, and uninteresting.

    The question I wanted to ask him was "is Trash Humpers in any way a statement or mockery on TRASH ART in general?".

    To me, this is how the movie came across. With a name like Trash Humpers, what else can you expect? It is one of the most pointless and trashiest movies I have ever seen - but that is exactly what I came for, and it effectively delivered that.

    It's full of humping, cussing, assorted offensive jokes, violence, vandalism, religion bashing, and anything else you'd expect in a trash art film. The difference is that with most trash art, the point is to try to shock you, scar you, or offend you. Trash Humpers, to me, seems more like it's doing these things in such a way that it's all a big joke - to take all of the other movies that have already done it, and re-enact them while giggling.

    After all, I feel that movies really are coming to a point where it is nearly impossible to shock people through exploitative sex, violence, etc. So why not find a nice comfortable place where we can live in that kind of world for an hour and a half and not try to shock anyone? We can just float through it and accept this demoralized joke of a world - that's the world that Trash Humpers creates to me.

    Unfortunately, when you start mocking your own genre or personal style of art, along with that comes the instinctive drive to take it to a far enough level where you are pushing people away. I felt that with several obnoxious things repeating throughout the film (such as Harmony's character constantly YELLING in your ear through entire scenes from right behind the camera) - he was showing signs of this kind of behavior. This is something I have observed from my own experiences as part of artistic projects, as well as observing friends mocking their own work. I have watched this kind of behavior occur with a lot of people towards the end of their artistic cycle.

    Of course, my interpretation of the movie could be completely off from how Harmony sees it. But, it's nice to have different perspectives isn't it? I enjoyed it - especially the fact that I got to see it in a theater with Harmony in attendance. But, I don't know if I'd ever want to watch it again. We'll always have Gummo for those endless viewings...
    Quanfa

    Might've been

    Old people or homeless or psychotic people doing weird crap is funny, and Korrine is one of the only people that can get away with the "no plot/day in the life" kind of movie. But I kept wondering if using actual old people would've made it better or worse.

    It's worth watching if you like Harmony Korrine or unsettling people just running around for 90 minutes. People looking for symbolism or depth in this movie are ridiculous.
    8Chris Knipp

    Is humping a US mailbox legal?

    Young provocateur filmmaker Harmony Korine, who lives in and grew up in Nashville, has made a film in trashy cheap VHS that evokes the nightmare world of degenerate southern redneck swine.

    He doesn't exactly say that. He explains when talking of the film that growing up, there were some scary old people who used to peek in windows at night, particularly next door where there was a young girl. Now the underpasses and open lots that he roamed as a youth are full of trash, and looking at trash receptacles one day the idea came to him of people humping them. He couldn't get real old people to play his roles so he gathered together a group of friends earlier this year who wear old person masks in the film. A couple of weeks of warming up and a couple of weeks of wandering around and shooting as the cast improvised and the film, like a sketch made on a whim, was done. It's perhaps an antidote to the more elaborate process involved in Korine's last film, 'Mr. Lonely,' a more straightforward film starring Diego Luna, Samantha Morton, and others.

    There is no plot, just a series of random scenes. A boy tries and fails to sink a basketball in a hoop. The garbage cans get humped. A screeching old lady rides a small dirt bike around with a baby doll tied dragging behind. The boy takes a hatchet to a doll in a parking lot and tries to chop up its head. A man recites an improvised poem about a nation of trash while one of the masked oldsters sits in a wheelchair and throws out firecrackers at a bunch of balloons. There is some nakedness. There is some nasty talk. There is almost the fear Korine said his wife felt when he played a VHS tape somebody'd given him, that it was going to turn into a snuff film. Korine wanted this to look and feel like found footage, like stuff on a strange videotape found in the trash somewhere. Made by old and demented perverts living a free and aimless life.

    Some of the images may evoke various sources such as Diane Arbus or Ralph Eugene Meatyard's still photos (strangeness, retardation, aimlessness, Gothic vacuity), but he denies any such connections. Somebody has suggested Korine is treading on the ground of early John Waters. But Waters has a knack for plot; even Korine's structured 'Kids' scenario rambles. And Waters has a great sense of humor. 'Trash Humpers' is ridiculous -- it's a horror movie that's also a comedy -- but there is no wit in it. It's a kind of improvised voyeurism. It does succeed in wandering well outside the mainstream. Its use of a very primitive kind of VHS reminds us as in a far more complex way did David Lynch's beautiful 'Inland Empire' that seeming "found" footage can be deeply evocative and scary. Even 'Blair Witch Project' comes to mind. Not many filmmakers would have staged a series of casually revolting stunts like those encapsulated randomly and (he says) in order of staging that Korine dumps on us here. It's a statement about limits and about freedom. And it's been acknowledged as valid. Even 'Variety' concludes its review of the film with the line: "Across the board, tech credits are appalling -- in a good way." Korine is an odd one (and an articulate interviewee in the NYFF press Q&A) and for festival and film buff audiences he is a force to reckon with. The question is, what's next? Will he go backwards or forwards?

    Dennis Lim has written an appreciative piece on the film for Cinema Scope. "Can the most regressive work yet by an artist known for arrested development also be a sign of his newfound maturity?" Now there's a bit of interpretive convolution for you. And the statement implied by the question may be true. But still the remaining question is, what's next?

    Shown as part of the main slate of the New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center 2009. Premiered at Toronto.
    6StevePulaski

    "Make it, make it, don't fake it!"

    Harmony Korine's Trash Humpers is an ode to cinematic lawlessness and unadulterated mischief. This is the strangest film Korine has ever made, which says a lot seeing as he was the driving force behind Gummo and Julien Donkey-Boy, two of the most unique films of the nineties decade. What makes it so significant in its perplexing obscurity is that it seems to be devoid of any meaning, where with Korine's two previous films you could totally sense there was something there - regardless of how it was presented or how subtle it appeared to be. Trash Humpers seems to have no meaning at all, and feels like Korine's handwritten insult to the unwritten laws of cinema that have threaded the cloth of conventionality.

    The film is shot on a low-quality VHS camera and follows three grotesque subhumans around town, who commit several unthinkable atrocities such as vandalism and public indecency, almost obtaining a strange form of pleasure from it. The three characters also wear petrified masks, resembling elderly people, to hide their identity and further make themselves irredeemably ugly. That's what this picture is in a nutshell - "irredeemably ugly" - as well as repulsive, unappealing, beyond offbeat, and a tough sit, even for its seventy-eight minute runtime.

    Korine's goal, if he even has any here, seems to be incorporating so much senseless imagery, unique style, lewd acts, shameless and ugly characters, and no cohesion in an attempt to make the most unwatchable film. And don't forget the touch of old school film editing and taping, which we'll get in to. It's one of the first times I'll call a film "unwatchable" not because of poor content but downright bad content committed by the film's characters. The stuff they are doing, humping mailboxes, running aimlessly screaming, breaking public property, and engaging in murder is unwatchable; the film itself is a mildly-amusing, but trivial novelty.

    However, I especially enjoyed the film's shot-on-VHS style, making strong note of the choppiness, the messiness, and the long-forgotten imperfections of VHS-quality tapes in a flawless, digitally-driven world. This gives the film a very lowly look to it, almost appearing like a sick home movie that was released to the public due to a criminal mistake. Some have compared it to Jackass, due to the excessive amount of silliness and pride the characters take in reeking havoc. I simply can't, because Jackass made me smile and laugh, while viewing Trash Humpers left me deeply disturbed and somewhat scarred.

    And yet, I emerge more positive than I thought I'd e. The tone of the picture is so eerie and unpleasant, and the effect it has on a viewer is somewhat lasting. I can't give it a completely positive review, for the film doesn't feature many attractive qualities other than its cinematography and is burdened by a longer-than-necessary length (forty-five minutes would've been more ideal). However, it earns a recommendation to the most adventurous and curious cinephiles - a group that might still emerge disgusted and somewhat horrified. It's a hard film to watch, and even harder to like, yet that could be Korine's ultimate goal overall.

    Directed by: Harmony Korine.

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    Related interests

    Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Sian Clifford in Fleabag (2016)
    Dark Comedy
    Amy Poehler in Parks and Recreation (2009)
    Mockumentary
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      At one point, Harmony Korine had considered leaving the film on unmarked VHS tapes left in random locations as a mystery for the unsuspecting public to discover. Korine also considered distributing the film by mailing it to police stations, but this idea was abandoned when such a release strategy would mean that the film would not retain copyright.
    • Quotes

      Hervé: Make it! Make it! Don't fake it!

    • Connections
      Featured in Durch die Nacht mit...: Harmony Korine und Gaspar Noé (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Single Girl, Married Girl
      Lyrics and Music by A.P. Carter

      ©Peer International Corp.

      With the authorization of La Societe D'Editions Musicales Internationales (S.E.M.I.) -Paris-France

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 14, 2011 (Netherlands)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • France
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Трахальщики мусорных бачков
    • Filming locations
      • Nashville, Tennessee, USA
    • Production companies
      • Alcove Entertainment
      • Warp Films
      • O' Salvation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $53
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 18m(78 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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