Fateful Findings - 2013 - Neil Breen |top| «2K 2027»
The climax arrives when Leah is kidnapped by an unknown assailant. Dylan uses teleportation powers to rescue her. Before releasing his hacked findings to the world, he visits his psychotherapist one last time—only to discover that she has been a ghost the entire time. He must then answer to a council of spirits guarding the mysterious book.
The villains of Fateful Findings are abstract concepts rather than fully realized characters. "The corporations" and "the government" are inherently evil, engaging in nebulous wrongdoing. Breen bypasses the specifics of political or economic corruption, focusing instead on the emotional and moral outrage of the deception. 3. Technology as Magic
He blinked. He could see through the wall—into the neighbor’s living room, where a politician was accepting a bribe in a briefcase. He touched his own forehead and knew the password to every bank account in the city. He had become the ultimate hacker. Not through code, but through fate .
If you are looking for a standard film, Fateful Findings will disappoint. However, if you are prepared to witness one of the most audacious, baffling, and sincere amateur films ever produced, it is an essential watch. Fateful Findings - 2013 - Neil Breen
Dylan represents a fascinating study in cinematic ego. He spends vast portions of the film walking around his house shirtless, writing his "revolutionary" book (which appears to just be pages of random text), and lamenting the corruption of the world. Yet, Breen’s performance is entirely devoid of cynicism. He delivers lines with a deadpan, breathless earnestness that makes it impossible to look away. When Dylan proclaims, "I cannot believe you committed suicide. I cannot believe you committed suicide. How could you have done this to yourself?", the sheer lack of traditional inflection elevates the moment to avant-garde theater. The Climax: A Masterclass in Political Surrealism
A tragic, pill-addicted wife who routinely passes out on the couch. The sudden reappearance of his childhood sweetheart.
who eventually overdoses in a subplot that starts and ends with jarring abruptness. The climax arrives when Leah is kidnapped by
The film radiates deep-seated paranoia regarding institutional power. Wealthy businessmen and politicians are presented as cartoonish villains who operate in shadowy boardrooms. Environmentalism and Mysticism
Part of the joy of watching Fateful Findings comes from its complete disregard for technical filmmaking conventions. The movie is a treasure trove of editing errors, bizarre sound mixing, and avant-garde practical effects.
Dylan communes with higher dimensions, occasionally manifesting a mystical artifact that looks suspiciously like a decorative plastic gemstone. He utilizes his powers to heal the sick, disappear at will, and stare blankly into the middle distance. 2. The Great Techno-Heist He must then answer to a council of
: At multiple points in the film, Dylan becomes frustrated and hurls laptops—five, six, a dozen at a time—across rooms. The sheer number of laptops destroyed over the course of the film has become a source of enduring fascination for fans.
The performances in the film range from completely wooden to wildly melodramatic. Breen’s own line delivery is famously monotone, except when he erupts into sudden, unprompted outbursts of grief or anger. Characters frequently repeat lines or state their internal motivations directly to the camera.
While the narrative structure is chaotic, Fateful Findings heavily features the recurring thematic obsessions that define all of Neil Breen’s work: 1. The Infallible, Messianic Protagonist