In a recent Substack post (the only social media he maintains), Tubero wrote: "The moment you accept industry money, you accept industry rules. My films are not products. They are bruises. You don't sell a bruise. You just wince and show it to the person next to you."
He is not for everyone. But for those tired of the polished lie of mainstream cinema, Anton Tubero is the only truth teller left standing in the parking lot, projector humming, bedsheet flapping in the wind. anton tubero indie film
The plot is simple: "Luis" (played by a real warehouse night-shift supervisor named Carl Argudo) rents a climate-controlled storage unit to store his deceased mother’s furniture. He falls behind on rent for his actual apartment. He makes a deal with the storage facility manager (played by Tubero’s frequent collaborator, a retired corrections officer named Frankie Meeks). Luis can live in the unit for 24 months. No lights after 9 PM. No noise. In exchange, his debt is cleared. In a recent Substack post (the only social