With a lineup that included James Whitney's Lapis (1963-66), Scott Bartlett's Off/On (1967), Don Fox's Omega (1970), and Adam Becket's Heavy Light (1973), the outdoor screening was transformed into an ersatz "be in." Whereas the retrospective presented 7362 primarily in technical terms (Arthur only briefly notes its link "by reputation to the psychedelic '
head trip'"), the cemetery audience freely indulged in the film's "mind-blowing" pyrotechnics.
Phil and Vera, whose mum and sister lived in Middlesbrough, saw an advert for the pounds 165 a
head trip in Middlesbrough Station last November and booked up.
It's a beautiful
head trip, not a book of emotions, much less anecdotes.
It's a
head trip to be sure, but not meant to be a head scratcher.
Linklater, following his rotoscoped
head trip A Scanner Darkly, has made his second film this year about the culture of addiction and exploitation.
The results are disjointed and wonderfully weird: art created from, and for, an intimate, one-on-one
head trip.
Instead he takes up skiing, exchanging his anxious, New York boho
head trip for an in-the-moment flight from consciousness.
What a
head trip it was, at 16 or 17, and that was working with good people and having a pretty good introduction to it.
A soul-cleansing by hellfire does wonders to jolt Patterson's suppressed memories on the Radiohead-inspired
head trip, "Hold It To the Fire".
Heinlein's 1960 short story "--All You Zombies--and if it's better in the intimate early stages than in the more grandiose later passages, all in all it's the sort of boldly illogical
head trip that gives preposterousness a good name.
Kapranos fantasizes about forging a new utopia for him and his would-be lover on the spacey, eight-minute electro-pop opus "Lucid Dreams." After the impassioned singer belts, "I'm going to give my aimless love/My angry heart and my desire," the song turns into psychedelic
head trip with a transcendent, four-and-a-half-minute instrumental that is destined to make a deeply cognitive connection with the listener.
the World" or Gaspar Noe's subjective
head trip, "Enter the Void" (seen through the eyes of a dead drug dealer wedged between the underworld and the afterlife).
realize life on Earth beats life on Mars on "Spaceman." Over a propulsive, New Order-inspired mix of guitars, bass, drums and synths, Flowers musters up his inner Bowie and whips up a delusional
head trip of a hook-laden chorus that's out of this world (despite the singer possibly being out of his mind).
It's a
head trip, alright, as we return to the psychedelic decade when all they needed was love - and some recreational drugs - to get by.
With imaginative handling, this freewheeling juggernaut of a
head trip, its assorted visual treatments rendered in relative degrees of awkwardness and artfulness, could catch on with hip ands worldwide.