A mentally-handicapped young man with a hidden artistic flair forms a relationship with a young college intern.A mentally-handicapped young man with a hidden artistic flair forms a relationship with a young college intern.A mentally-handicapped young man with a hidden artistic flair forms a relationship with a young college intern.
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaActor Marcus Edward provided the story to writer/director John Swon.
Featured review
Very indie
Poor production values but a first-rate performance by the lead playing the {autistic?) young man. Somewhat surprised I haven't seen him in anything more "mainstream" given his ability.
The plot isn't exactly novel - mentally-handicapped young man with artistic gift bonds with his equally female young care giver at a mental hospital or some state facility. She's about to graduate college and has an outlook equal parts naive and pessimistic about her future as she's living with her alcohol-abusing boyfriend. Her fight to get Peter released and on his own is an obvious proxy battle for herself (a point that is re-enforced once too often) and the lead actresses' performance just isn't quite up to conveying these depths.
Despite all these flaws, the film is captivating in it's own way. Once the story starts, you're more or less hooked and wanting to know the ending. When Peter wigs out in public, clutching his head between his legs - all filmed from a distance in a creepy, voyeur sort of style - it feels so real you almost want to look away. I can't help but imagine what the film could have been with some money and better technical skill (both in front of and behind the camera).
The plot isn't exactly novel - mentally-handicapped young man with artistic gift bonds with his equally female young care giver at a mental hospital or some state facility. She's about to graduate college and has an outlook equal parts naive and pessimistic about her future as she's living with her alcohol-abusing boyfriend. Her fight to get Peter released and on his own is an obvious proxy battle for herself (a point that is re-enforced once too often) and the lead actresses' performance just isn't quite up to conveying these depths.
Despite all these flaws, the film is captivating in it's own way. Once the story starts, you're more or less hooked and wanting to know the ending. When Peter wigs out in public, clutching his head between his legs - all filmed from a distance in a creepy, voyeur sort of style - it feels so real you almost want to look away. I can't help but imagine what the film could have been with some money and better technical skill (both in front of and behind the camera).
helpful•72
- firstringblog
- Feb 6, 2009
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- Budget
- $9,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Color
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