TL;DR – A 15-minute musical experiment that smashes the music of Thom Yorke with the sensibilities of Paul Thomas Anderson
Score – 4 out of 5 stars
Post-Credit Scene – There is no post-credit scene

Review –
This has been the year of the experimental music video/film hybrid, we have
gotten the narrative version with Guava
Island, the absurd with Bash
Brothers, and the documentary hybrid with HΘMΣCΘMING.
Well, today we continue this genre with a collaboration between director Paul
Thomas Anderson noted for more visually stylistic films like Phantom
Thread and Thom Yorke one of the main voices behind Radiohead. If you
are a fan of Thom or Paul then I assume that combination instantly got your attention,
and if you are not this is only 15 minutes so check it out anyway.
So to set the scene, we are on a train and a lady (Dajana Roncione) leaves her
lunchbox behind and a man (Thom Yorke) takes it for himself only for things to
get weird. Well, that is about it, as it is only 15 minutes there is not a
whole lot more to say other than it is quite a ride.
The first thing I want to talk about is the choreography from Damien Jalet which
is one of the three core things that makes this one of the most interesting
things I have seen so far this year. There is a flow to the movement, but also
a precision that is a really interesting blend. There is a lot of group
performances that gives this an organic feel, but also the sharp movements are
also otherworldly. Which does sort of fit the theme as anima is referring to
the soul. To be honest, I am also always a sucker for the movement that lines
up with the beat of the music.