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Holding onto the dream of bourgeois America has never seemed so impossible, stupid, crass, and funny as in Jon Waters' Polyester (1981). Divine heads up a cast of Waters-regulars and boorish newcomers to tell the story of the dissolution of Francine Fishpaw's family as it succumbs to adulatory, teenage pregnancy, alcoholism, drug addiction, hooliganism, murder, and a lot of real-world smells thanks to the scratch-and-sniff gimmick of Odorama.
If you'd like to watch ahead for next week's film, we will be discussing and reviewing Douglas Sirk's All That Heaven Allows (1955.)
By Mike Noyes and Charles Peterson4
1515 ratings
Holding onto the dream of bourgeois America has never seemed so impossible, stupid, crass, and funny as in Jon Waters' Polyester (1981). Divine heads up a cast of Waters-regulars and boorish newcomers to tell the story of the dissolution of Francine Fishpaw's family as it succumbs to adulatory, teenage pregnancy, alcoholism, drug addiction, hooliganism, murder, and a lot of real-world smells thanks to the scratch-and-sniff gimmick of Odorama.
If you'd like to watch ahead for next week's film, we will be discussing and reviewing Douglas Sirk's All That Heaven Allows (1955.)

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