大唐天宝年间,曹家村世代守护着一柄镇村宝刀。曹叔公欲将守刀人之位传给弟子,却左右为难:大弟子文远志大才疏,实力不足;二弟子文武沉稳可靠,却突患手抖之症,难以持刀。与此同时,各方势力早已对宝刀虎视眈眈,外有混混贼人明抢,内有村长暗中设局,宝刀甚至一度遭人调包。在种种艰难险阻之中,文远与文武将如何识破阴谋?他们又能否守住这柄世代相传的宝刀与家族使命?
Two codependent best friends become addicted to the heroin-like touch of an alien narcissist who may or may not be trying to take over the world. Writer and director Addison Heimann’s second feature film is provocatively comedic, inventive, and insane in the best possible way. An ode to the deliriously stylistic lens of Japanese cinema in the ’60s and ’70s, Touch Me dares to “go there” with its themes of mental health, desire, and Hentai-infused sexual abandon. Olivia Taylor Dudley sinks into character to portray a fractured and wandering human being in desperate need of a life-affirming touch, while Lou Taylor-Pucci’s tracksuit-clad alien persona is played to delightful perfection. Jordan Gavaris and Marlene Forte round out an impeccable cast of far-out characters who manage to be at once acrimonious yet relatable. The end result is a weird, wild, and frenzied fever dream with so much to unpack. While we may not be able to relieve ourselves of self-doubt, deep-seated childhood trauma, and debilitating anxiety with the simple touch of an extraterrestrial being, maybe life isn’t so bad after all?
逃离伊斯法罕后,医生罗伯·科尔来到伦敦,决心传播医学知识。他卷入了一场法庭阴谋,在为病人的生命和荣誉而战的同时,也直面减轻痛苦这一深刻的人类困境。