
Since the release of Rubber back in 2010, the name Quentin Dupieux became synonymous with experimental cinema. Apparently, you cannot make a film about a living tire with psychic powers named Robert without creating a name for yourself as a master of nonsense. Dupieux worked hard to keep the title, developing an enviable collection of films that explores the limits of the human capacity to find meaning in even the most ludicrous stories. Incredible but True is the latest movie by Dupieux, and just like its predecessors, it offers an absurd narrative that’s equally funny and relevant. Unfortunately, by trying to create a movie that’s more accessible to the public in general, Incredible but True loses some of the Dupieux magic we came to love in the past two decades. . Just as in previous Dupieux films, Incredible but True presents a preposterous idea right from the start, only to explore how the people involved in a surreal situa...