"Director Nara Denning’s
daring six-vignette production, “Neurotique” is fittingly, an expressionistic exercise in erotic neurosis.
It’s German Expressionism roots, devious brand of eccentric-yet-relevant humor, and subversively surreal imagery combine
to render this Neo-silent narrative compendium a wholly unique and stirringly imaginative artistic offering.
William Buck plays the central figure in each of the six shorts that comprise
“Neurotique.” His sexually repressed, tepid but reactionary characterization drive the episodes with a peculiar
likability veiled in an oddly familiar air of mystery. Whether a caricatured drunkard who petitions a back-alley genie
for whiskey and a trio of dancing concubines, sexual prey as an unwilling sanatorium resident, the Frankenstein/Weird Science
god of a mechanical sexpot robot, or a lurking safari photographer who encounters a giant jungle-goddess communing with her
waterfall lover, Buck remains a charming performer capable of infusing his character(s) with depth and nuance that serves
to enrich his adventures, considering even the likely interpretation that his character is intended to represent an archetype
rather than a singular individual.
Denning’s measured direction,
which aims to paint each frame as a freestanding work of art, combined with the wildly creative set design, classic minimalist
effects, and a brilliant original score by Kevin Harp, Stoo Odom, Willy the Mailman, Marco Villalobos, and Seth Augustus recalls
the innovative, unbridled imagination of silent-era French auteur, Georges Méliès, and the cryptic inevitability
of David Lynch’s 1977 landmark, “Eraserhead.”
With “Neurotique”
Denning artfully protests the prevailing attitudes of the tech-driven, meretriciousness of modern commercial filmmaking, and
demonstrates, like Martin Scorsese’s 1980 masterpiece, “Raging Bull,” that the entirety of a film’s
mise-en-scène, regardless of existing technologies or techniques, should be determined largely as an element of artistic
discretion.
Denning wields that discretion confidently and comes away with a
titillating and uncompromised exploration of the expansive and mysterious lacuna of sexual desire and the elusive nature of
identity."
-Eric M. Armstrong, The Moving Arts Film Journal
"The Collector strives for the ... perfect catch."
"In Nara Denning’s NEUROTIQUE, words
get in the way of the games couples play. Coupling the formalized aspects of the short underground—mid 20th century-art
film, with classic narratives and acting postures more akin to 1920s silent film, Denning achieves a new form perfectly suited
to her subject matter. Fetish, folly, and fury; Denning’s post-modern matriarchal hilarious and haunting takes on various
romantic relationship fantasy-games may seem cliche at first, but gradually, and seductively, become bonafied archetypes of
convulsive beauty and suspended disbelief. Some of the most poetic filmmaking I’ve seen since early Hal Hartley or Cheryl
Dunye. "