I still don’t know if I really liked the 1960s British surreal horror/black comedy movie Mumsy, Nanny, Sonny, and Girly.  It runs a little long and I think it actually could have benefited from being gorier, but it definitely delivers on some intensely weird imagery and makes a valid social statement.  It feels like a movie that Gregg Araki would have made if he had been working in the early 60s. 

I still don’t know if I really liked the 1960s British surreal horror/black comedy movie Mumsy, Nanny, Sonny, and Girly.  It runs a little long and I think it actually could have benefited from being gorier, but it definitely delivers on some intensely weird imagery and makes a valid social statement.  It feels like a movie that Gregg Araki would have made if he had been working in the early 60s.