‘Buffet Infinity’ is the most fun you’ll have feeling deeply unsettled this year. It plays like a lost episode of ‘The Twilight Zone’ directed by a rogue archivist. The battle between two restaurants, told through their own propaganda,…
Buffet Infinity
Picking from hundreds of hours of original, low-budget TV ads, Glassman tells the sinister tale of two restaurants battling it out in the town of Westridge County.
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While ‘Buffet Infinity’ earns points for sheer originality, its execution feels more like an academic exercise than a satisfying narrative. The central gimmick is impressive for about twenty minutes; the process of recognising and recontextualising the ad footage…
A masterclass in subversive storytelling, ‘Buffet Infinity’ uncovers a chilling gothic tale lurking in your grandmother’s daytime television. Glassman’s directorial vision, though shrouded in mystery, is unmistakable in every precise edit. The film weaponises nostalgia, using the familiar…
This is a film of fascinating, if inconsistent, conceptual audacity. The premise—a narrative stitched from low-budget ads—is undeniably clever, and the early stages of Westridge County’s restaurant feud are darkly hilarious. However, the conceit risks wearing thin over…
‘Buffet Infinity’ is a triumph of editorial alchemy. Director Glassman performs a miraculous feat, spinning the base metal of forgettable TV commercials into cinematic gold. The performances by Singh, Theobald and Workun, extracted from their original context, gain…
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At its heart, the film explores the dark side of capitalism and competition at a hyper-local level. It scrutinises the American (and by extension, Western) dream of small business ownership, asking what happens when rivalry consumes identity. Themes of consumerism, authenticity, and the narratives we construct to sell ourselves are paramount. By using advertising as its sole visual language, it directly critiques how commerce shapes our stories and relationships, suggesting a lurking madness beneath the friendly facade of community commerce.