The title may allude to Philip K Dick but "Blade Runner" this ain't. Once again we are in a future that looks like the present or even the recent past, a future where life is seemingly meaningless and where people are gunned down willy-nilly as they go about their everyday business - or are they even 'people'.
There's no real narrative. Ion De Sosa's short feature, (it only lasts an hour), isn't so much disquieting as baffling, (it helps to know the source if only to put some flesh on the bare bones), and yet, without doing anything out of the ordinary, this is sufficiently radical to be of more than passing interest and it signals a future of sorts for its director. Of course, one things for sure and that is you won't see it anytime soon down at your local.
There's no real narrative. Ion De Sosa's short feature, (it only lasts an hour), isn't so much disquieting as baffling, (it helps to know the source if only to put some flesh on the bare bones), and yet, without doing anything out of the ordinary, this is sufficiently radical to be of more than passing interest and it signals a future of sorts for its director. Of course, one things for sure and that is you won't see it anytime soon down at your local.