Blu-ray release


With this sort of purposeful, if somewhat cursory, theoretical provocation, its flashback opening cued by a face-off and a gunshot, its occasionally deadpan coolness, its ironic music choice (“Ring of Fire” after the explosion), and its youthful stylistic exuberance (a noteworthy use of inserts, camera movement, and striking angles), Suture rings of a markedly 1990s independent aesthetic. This is in no way a rebuff, though. While it took them nearly 10 years to produce a second feature, McGehee and Siegel have created a film here that is thoroughly engaging, one that looks fantastic, and one that has thankfully hung around long enough on the margins of cinephilia to now be seen as the hip alternative classic that it is: http://www.cutprintfilm.com/blu/new-on-blu-ray-suture/

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