Written and Directed by Craig Pryce.
Starring Brittany Bristow, Morgan Kohan, Julia Sarah Stone, Kyla Avril Young, Luke Bilyk, Alanna Bale, Hannah Vandenbygaart, Tymika Tafari, Derek McGrath, Greg Calderone, Paulino Nunes, Marie Ward, Alex Harrouch, Jordan Todosey, Howard Hoover, and Nell Verlaque.
SYNOPSIS:
In 1972, young women looking for a fresh start in life endure isolated captivity in a true 98-day human experiment studying the effects of marijuana on females.
Julia Sarah Stone is signing up for another study here in
The Marijuana Conspiracy (following her outstanding performance in the recently released sleep paralysis chiller
Come True), this time in 1972 as Mary and to become data on the effects caused by the titular drug, specifically starting out with women aged 18-24. She’s even playing the same kind of drifter character that essentially lives on the streets without an actual home to call her own, so free communal living for 98 days (three months of smoking capp
March 9, 2021|
In 1909, the Oxford English Dictionary first defined the term “camp” as “ostentatious, exaggerated, affected, theatrical; effeminate or homosexual behavior” and from that definition on, we have delivered. Camp has been used to comment on society’s idea of what high art, taste, and culture is by disrupting it with high energy and overblown presentations, often approaching the boundary of bad taste with always smart humor. The successful camp is true camp, and bad camp is just kitsch. For example: Lady Gaga is camp, the movie Showgirls is kitsch.
Fighting the good fight in the world of cinematic camp for the LGBTQ community is screenwriter Michael Zara. In this past year, with an increasing abundance of Hallmark and Lifetime holiday films, the SyFy network premiered Michael’s debut on-screen film, Letters to Satan Claus. Adding to SyFy’s library of films that include Sharknado, Shark in Venice, Dinocroc, and Santa Jaws (seriously, what is SyFy�