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Derrick Dunn

“Tapawingo” is a strange, sweet comedy that refuses to be cool

“Tapawingo” feels like it was fished out of a half-forgotten VHS bin—sun-bleached cover, crooked sticker, and all. Director Dylan K. Narang and his co-writer Brad DeMarea have crafted a comedy that wanders through its own weird ecosystem with the confidence of someone wearing tube socks with church shoes.

And I mean that as praise. The film plays like “Napoleon Dynamite, and “Rushmore spent an afternoon listening to Oingo Boingo, then dared “My Bodyguard” to tag along. Jon Heder returns to his natural habitat: gawky sincerity wrapped in deadpan timing. His Nate Skoog isn’t Napoleon redux—just a cousin who grew up, got a depressing mail-room job, and still hasn’t shaken the feeling that life forgot to pick him up from practice.  

He shares a house with his mother, Ramona (Amanda Bearse), and her boyfriend, Tom (John Ratzenberger), with the energy of a man who keeps coupons for emotional manipulation. When Nate isn’t sorting envelopes or avoiding Tom’s wisdom, he’s daydreaming with Will Luna (Jay Pichardo), his loyal partner in delusional ambition.  

The two imagine themselves as small-town mercenaries… the kind of hired guns who might take a job for $40 and a coupon book. Things shift when Nate is forced to babysit his boss’s son, Oswalt—a kid who looks like he was born to frustrate adults on purpose.

Their worlds collide—literally—when Gretchen (Kim Matula) skateboard-kicks her way into the film. A tough, arcade-dwelling blonde with zero interest in small talk, she’s the sort of ’80s character who would’ve had her own spin-off on USA Network. But whimsy meets trouble when Oswalt gets jumped by two knuckleheads working for Nelson Tarwater, a low-rent hustler with the swagger of a man whose business card probably says “Entrepreneur / Vibes.”

Nate inadvertently becomes Oswalt’s protector, earning the attention of Nelson’s older brother, Stoney, played by Billy Zane, with the wordless menace of a man who doesn’t speak because the void does it for him.

The cast leans into the oddball rhythm without ever winking at the camera. Gina Gershon, in a deranged detour as Nate’s office fling, seems to arrive from another movie but fits right in—like a firecracker tossed into a kiddie pool.

Tapawingo isn’t a retread so much as a spiritual cousin to the cult comedies of yesteryear. It respects their awkward charm while carving out its own strange, lovable groove. By the time the credits roll, you realize the film never asked to be cool. It just asked to be itself—and that’s its sweetest joke.

“TAPAWINGO” is now available digitally.

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