In Abel Ferrara's New Rose Hotel, Fox/Christopher Walken celebrates the risk-fuelled life, and living without fear or limits, it's one of his best performances.
Perhaps there's something of the actor's lifestyle caught up with imaginative redefinition, the lucrative transference of artistic synergies inherently illuminating his authenticity.
The film's well-cast, he's amicably joined by a less animated yet lithe Willem Dafoe (X), who works as his trusted partner engaging in lucrative industrial espionage.
Asia Argento (Sandii) luxuriously complements his smitten improvised amorous calling, the hopeless romantic having found yet another seemingly impressionable curious enthusiast.
But she may have more than one identity and may not seek the cloistered path.
So distressing these inspired freedoms.
Ethereal interconnected independence.
It's kind of like sci-fi noir although the detectives aren't what you'd expect, they're more like spies helping a science-genius move from one covetous corporation to the next.
The ominous sense of impending doom delicately blended with ebullient hope, shockingly seduces and destructively serenades as the jocose trio travels the globe.
Ah well, it doesn't seem like they're hiring poets although in the '90s we really believed, or I did anyways, that the old world stereotypes prejudicially preventing misfits from finding alternative trade routes would fade away.
Into banal feudal oblivion along with war and irritable class-bias.
Since Trump things have changed dramatically.
Not to mention the woeful pandemic.
Nevertheless, I imagined the poems I've been writing recently for several years as time progressed.
When new rhymes seemed improbable, I rewrote the language.
For better or worse, I don't really know.
I am still having as much fun, although I need to start transforming my film reviews too.
The future radiating indeterminate.
Just picked up some more horseradish.
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