While it is not considered acceptable for us to advocate the use of psychedelic drugs, there is no disputing that certain music just sounds better, film is more interesting, and rare oddities, such as the video you are about to watch, which would otherwise be lost in a cesspool of pop culture, are transformed into sonic and visual masterpieces under the influence of LSD.

This art video from 1983 called “Possibly in Michigan,” was produced by Cecelia Condit, who is now a film professor at UW-Milwaukee.

Without trying to dissect its meaning, we suggest that you watch the video at least once completely sober and enjoy the beauty of its weirdness. Then, perhaps, it might be fun to partake in some herbal refreshment and give it a look see from that angle. If all of that works out in your favor, then why not give a view from the technicolor perspective? After all, we believe intoxicating substances were put on this planet to enhance individual interpretations of art. Therefore, it would be an injustice to let this bizarre treasure slip from your clutches without experiencing it in the appropriate manner.

Of course, this is just a matter of opinion...view it however you want.

Here is the video's official description:

"Possibly In Michigan is an operatic fairytale about cannibalism in Middle America. A masked man stalks a woman through a shopping mall and follows her home. In the end, their roles are reversed when the heroine deposits a mysterious Hefty bag at the curb. Like Condit's other video narratives, Possibly In Michigan shows bizarre events disrupting mundane lives. Combining the commonplace with the macabre, humor with the absurd, she constructs a world of divided reality."

 

 

 

 

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