- A woman's dark and absurdist nightmare vision comprising a continuous recitation of the alphabet and bizarre living representations of each letter.
- Against a backdrop of bizarre shapes and textures, a small organic figure gives birth to the letters of the alphabet while a mixture of children's voices and an operatic tune are singing out. The figure's head collapses causing blood to rain on a girl while she lays in her bed, resulting in the girl violently vomiting blood herself.—Jennifer Harrison
- Mixing uneasy stop-motion animation and corrosive live-action with the subconsciously tormenting "Alphabet Song" sung by Robert Chadwick, David Lynch's surreal nightmare on celluloid portrays an endlessly relentless and repulsive transformation of the alphabet. Visceral visions, disturbing fears, and abstract phobias embody a sleeping girl's haunting night-time dream sequences, as the twenty-six letters of the English language become symbols of decay and the punitive tools of a parasitic force. Each letter gives birth to another set of deleterious mutations until a climactic ending drenched in bright-red blood sends chills down the spine. Is there an escape from the ABCs of dread?—Nick Riganas
It looks like we don't have any synopsis for this title yet. Be the first to contribute.
Learn moreContribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content