
Boys Go to Jupiter
Julian Glander / US, 2024 / 96 min.
“Have a Grubby day!”

“Have a Grubby day!”
Welcome in Julian Glander’s wonderfully weird, neon-coloured world, where we meet Billy 5000, a high school dropout who was once dubbed “the human calculator”, but now tries to make it to $5,000 working for food delivery app Grubster. Along the way, Billy encounters a donut-shaped alien who’s being hunted by juice mogul Dr. Dolphin who grows mutated fruits from moon rocks. And what seems like a distant planet full of oddities, is actually just an alternate suburban Florida.
Was the pandemic good for something after all? The idea for this deadpan musical comedy about a teenage gig worker with a rise-and-grind mindset came to Glander when he spent a lot of time on Google Street View during the lockdown. He grew up in Tampa and zooming around Florida in 3D made him feel like he was back there again. A brain fart or two later (and loads of hours playing around in Blender), Boys Go to Jupiter was born.
Influenced by Peanuts episodes, the offbeat Rankin/Bass holiday specials, the claymation Frog and Toad series, next to his own animated GIFS and work for Adult Swim, Glander delivers a surprising lo-fi indie film that somewhat resembles the look and feel of a cosy game. Boys Go to Jupiter even throws in a few memorable songs, including a ballad about the various ways you can eat eggs and an alien song about combo meals of every shape and size. More of a collage of encounters of the strange kind, it’s a fabulously bonkers film featuring bored teenagers and pretty bizarre interactions, yet Glander’s feature debut is also a timely story about economic inequality and our late-capitalist Western society.
This is part of
Details
Director
Julian Glander
Production year
2024
Country
US
Length
96 min.
Language
English
Subtitles
ENG
Format
DCP
Part of
Kaboom 2025
Let’s be real—conformity is boring, outdated and even dangerous. Resistance is what changes history, sparks creativity, and fuels innovation. Some of the most powerful animated stories ever told were born from resistance. Sixty years ago, the Provo movement shook Amsterdam with its anarchist creativity, by challenging authority and reimagining the public space. As the city itself marks 750 years, what better way to celebrate than by amplifying voices that refuse to be tamed?



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