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![]() In Search Of A Midnight Kiss Rough, Like People You Might Know
“We’re inviting total insanity into our house!” ejaculates the lovelorn, broke, and creatively blocked And with that setup, be warned that watching this movie is itself something akin to inviting insanity into your presence—and then being asked not to pass judgment on that insanity. When we first meet Wilson, he’s photoshopping a woman’s face onto another woman’s nude body—and when he gets it looking realistic enough, he, uh, gets to work—only to have his roommate Jacob (and Jacob’s gal Min, whose digitized face has, uh, inspired Wilson) catch him with his shorts around his ankles and his hands erstwhile occupied. Jacob, of course, finds the incident hysterical, and Min thinks it’s “sweet” that
At this point, I was thinking: So… this is the kind of film where women find porn fantasy flattering, and men find it pure entertainment, eh? Well, yes; and no. That’s certainly the story’s starting point, and As the story progresses, however, and as we get to know We also get to know Jacob and Min a lot better, too, and we discover that the film takes a somewhat dimmer (if still not judgmental) view of those two. Jacob, after all, is the source of all sorts of vulgar wisdom. “Your nutsack,” he cautioning And that makes a certain kind of sense, because this is a film about the dark side of Some films—such as Garden Party—seem to suggest that people love L.A. precisely because of its decadence; Midnight Kiss, however, seems to say that people love the city despite the decadence. That’s an improvement, I guess. But that’s still not much of a recommendation. I’ve never been fond of the “What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas” mentality, or of And now, thanks to Midnight Kiss—the kind and quality of film a young Jim Jarmusch might have made about L.A., had the inclination struck him—I think I can add L.A. to my list of what are, for all intents and purposes, contemporary America’s frontier towns, places where people will endure just about anything for the lure of big bucks and fame. You can understand why people would want to visit; but why would anyone want to stay? And that’s a good metaphor for my experience with Midnight Kiss. I guess I should be thankful that, up until recently, I’ve only seen the glitzy side of In Search Of A Midnight Kiss is unrated—but this is the kind of stuff that’s drawing an R these days. If I had my druthers, it’d be NC-17. Thoughtless parents drag toddlers to R-rated stuff all the time, and it’s silly that our culture thinks that’s okay. Kids simply don’t have any business seeing films like this, under any circumstances. Courtesy of a local publicist, Greg attended a press screening of In Search Of A Midnight Kiss. |
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