The Scary of Sixty-First Review: Nothing Is out of Bounds in This Rude, Riotous, Post-Epstein Horror The Scary of Sixty-First Review: Nothing Is out of Bounds in This Rude, Riotous, Post-Epstein Horror
Dasha Nekrasova s debut has knives out for Jeffrey Epstein, the royal family and any delicate viewer sensibilities, but is funny and angry enough to get away with it.
Guy Lodge, provided by
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Running time: 1 hour 21 minutes
Courtesy of Stag Pictures
There can be a fine line between a good idea and a terrible one followed through with utter conviction, and it’s along said line that “The Scary of Sixty-First” dances with heedless, wicked abandon. A brash, gutsy, morbidly funny first feature from actor-filmmaker-podcaster Dasha Nekrasova, it runs on a premise that could have been written as a dare, or a prank: Two female friends move into a freakishly affordable apartment on Manhattan’s Upper East Side that turns out to have been owned by the late pe