In this experimental short from filmmaker Gaylene Preston, a no-nonsense hitchhiker is subjected to the ramblings of a deeply philosophical driver. Impressively, Peter Cathro delivers the long, stream of consciousness ramble in a single take — while actor Shirley Grace manages to keep a straight face throughout. The driver's musings on art, society and creative expression cannot be quashed (even by a kiss), and it becomes too much to bear for the hitchhiker, who just wants to get to Taihape. Filmed in a lo-fi style, this screened at The Women’s Gallery in Wellington as part of 1981 exhibition Sexxuality.
He's wretched, servile. He's on the peripheral: like the criminal, out there somewhere, with the bourgeois, existing in the middle — they observe but they don't understand the future, the concepts of future. The artist does.– Art (Peter Cathro) muses on the role of the artist in society
Funded by the Queen Elizabeth ll Arts Council
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