IMDb 0 2021 HD

Endlessnessism

Endlessnessism

2021
Drama
12 min NR Australia
0 IMDB

EPILEPSY WARNING! A 16mm erotic trip about two friends who play a game where each rule prescribes them to act out their most violent and perverse private fantasies.

Personnel // Cast & Crew

Director Liam Clark
Starring
Dylan Julian Clark / Avril Tait

How Viewers Describe This Film

Common themes and sentiments

provocative unsettling daring experimental intense dark erotic psychological raw challenging visceral confronting

Reviews

I
Isabelle Moreau
Mar 31, 2026
3.5 / 5
3.5

With its explicit 'epilepsy warning' and premise of enacting violent fantasies, 'Endlessnessism' immediately signals its intent to confront and disturb. The 16mm cinematography provides a tangible grit to this erotic exploration, focusing on Dylan Julian Clark and Avril…

A
Alistair Finch
Mar 31, 2026
3.0 / 5
3.0

'Endlessnessism' is an exercise in provocative cinema, utilising its 16mm format to create a deliberately raw and intimate feel. The film’s core concept—a game where two friends, Dylan Julian Clark and Avril Tait, act out their most violent…

G
Genevieve Dubois
Mar 31, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

A daring and visually arresting piece, 'Endlessnessism' plunges viewers into a disquieting exploration of intimacy and transgression. The decision to shoot on 16mm imbues the film with a raw, almost feverish quality, perfectly suiting its narrative about two…

M
Marcus Thorne
Mar 31, 2026
2.0 / 5
2.0

This experimental offering, 'Endlessnessism', presents a premise that promises a transgressive exploration of human psychology. Shot on 16mm, the film attempts an erotic journey through a game of enacted fantasies between its two leads, Dylan Julian Clark and…

E
Eleanor Vance
Mar 31, 2026
3.5 / 5
3.5

Endlessnessism' is a bold, if at times opaque, descent into the abyss of shared private desires. The 16mm aesthetic lends a grainy, urgent texture to this erotic trip, which centres on two friends, played by Dylan Julian Clark…

FAQs

While the director of 'Endlessnessism' is unknown, the film's description as a '16mm erotic trip' featuring violent and perverse fantasies suggests an auteur-driven vision focused on psychological exploration and sensory experience. The director likely prioritised a raw, unvarnished presentation, using the 16mm format to amplify the film's unsettling atmosphere. The emphasis on enacting private fantasies points towards a deliberate exploration of taboos and the darker aspects of human psychology, aiming for a disquieting and immersive viewer experience.