KUSO
KUSO

First announced in September, acclaimed and celebrated music artist Flying Lotus, and filmmaker Eddie Alcazar partnered up to form the independent film finance and production outfit, Brainfeeder Films. The newly formed operation’s first feature film is “Kuso,” which Flying Lotus directed under his real name, Steven Ellison, from a script he co-wrote with David Firth and Zach Fox.

Starring Iesha Coston, Zack Fox, Hannibal Buress, The Buttress, Tim Heidecker, Mali Matsuda and George Clinton, “Kuso’s” synopsis reads: Broadcasting through a makeshift network of discarded televisions, this story is tangled up in the aftermath of Los Angeles’ worst earthquake nightmare. Travel between screens and aftershocks into the twisted lives of the survived.




The film is set to make its World Premiere at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival later this month, in the MIDNIGHT section, which includes genre films, from horror and comedy, to works that defy genre classification. Flying Lotus’ “Kuso” falls into the latter category if what we’re hearing about it from those in-the-know is true.

Hiro Murai, who has apparently seen the film already, tweeted the below in reaction to it (by the way, Murai is a frequent collaborator of Donald Glover’s; in addition to directing music videos for Glover’s rapper alter ego Childish Gambino, Murai also directed most of the episodes of his hit FX series “Atlanta”):

“Jodorowsky” is Chilean-French avant-garde filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky known for his violently surreal cinematic images that often provoke via a blend of mysticism and religious symbolism.

“Funky Forest” is a Japanese film comprised of a collection of outrageously surreal stories, including both computer generated and hand drawn animation segments and musical interludes.

“Salad Fingers” is a once immensely popular British surreal post-apocalyptic, psychological horror Flash cartoon series.




You can see some commonalities in all 3 of these references – Surrealism, hybrid formats, darkness, violence… so prepare for the proverbial mind-f*ck.

Eddie Alcazar is producing the film, which was shot in Los Angeles.

A first trailer for “Kuso” premiered today; watch it below (poster above):