A politically and emotionally evocative cult classic in the making receives a beautiful transfer courtesy of Kino Lorber.
The film’s attempt at political insight and portrayal of social malaise are meant to give it the illusion of depth.
What’s dark and weird about Zach Clark’s film is also what’s tangible, authentic, and wise about it.
The film’s experimental spirit gets washed out by its ultimate surrendering to more conventional, and overrated, narrative imperatives.
Thank heaven for kinky accidents.
Zach Clark’s film posits a world in which finding and maintaining amour is anything but routine.