A variety of striking characters and agendas thread together to create a quilt of varying quality. A dumb blonde beauty pageant contestant butchers her way through her mottled understanding of the world; a convict explains his unfair predicament after caught selling pot on the street; a Hmong professor attempts to explain the history of his people to a crowd obviously in need of an enthusiastic orator to hold their attention; a maker of keys shares his ignorant and bigoted views to a customer with unassuming abandon, while a black minister explains his inability to voice his differing opinion with his congregation on the notion of equal rights for the LGBT community.
Throughout the variety of voices, the disparity between the disenfranchised and the privileged couldn’t be more apparent. WASP culture still makes for an easy target, with upper middle class white females representing the dearth of ignorant venom that, at least according to this experimental film, free float through the flotsam of the nation’s conscious wreckage. Director Hal Hartley (who casts his Henry Fool actor Thomas Jay Ryan into the mix) credited here as an independent film icon, is an interesting choice for the project, though he’s more of a conductor stringing along a series of inflections that are as equally bewitching as they are banal.