Blossom Valley, written by Laszlo Csuja and Gergo Nagy, directed by the former
8 out of 10
Bianka is the heroine of this interesting, art house Hungarian motion picture.
She is an outre, rather wild twenty years old girl, who decides one day that she would take an infant from the prom where he was left for a while, by his mother or baby sitter.
The other main character is Laci, a man of about the same age, but with a low enough IQ for him to be still under the supervision of an uncle, who is his legal guardian.
Laci has had a test, wherein he is told to distinguish between a number of words and identity the ones that make sense, if there are any.
And mixed with nonexistent words, there are some that make sense, only the challenged young man says at the end that he has not heard one that does.
The results of the examination mean that he cannot be regarded as having discerning capacity.
He would team up with the equally, if not more bizarre Bianka.
The girl eats at one point some ice cream and she shares it with a dog, who eats from the same ice with her, licking each other in the process.
At another stage, she plays with the one she claims is the father of her baby.
Their game?
They throw a poor, live hen at one another.
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