It is no secret that cinematic movies seeking to undress the legislatures of electronic music are generally, specifically, and perhaps inherently, quite awful.
FTVS was couriered a copy of the recently re-edited and soon to be re-released film, Speaking in Code. Groundbreakingly, director Amy Grill has understood what Orson Welles, Steven Spielberg and Michael Bay have hitherto failed to grasp: a movie’s theological acumen is contingent upon the geometric weight it prescribes to the politicization of minimal techno.
On second thought, perhaps this movie is utter shit.
Always honest but never incorrect, FTVS urges you to watch this movie — good friends and avid FTVS readers Michael Mayer, Ellen Alien, and of course, the Wighnomy Brothers provide sub-altern yet perhaps nonsensical commentary on the extremely epistemological quandaries attached to Germanic identity and having a too-strong affinity for ketamine.
FTVS of course gives this movie ten (10) out of (10) stars, but only because it provides deserved exposure to FTVS’s favorites warlords, the Brothers Wighnomy.
No related posts.
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.


“techno is…a way of living in the modern world and tolerating it on your own terms”
suck a diiiick