Week 2 (June 28 – July 4) – Dawna Lee Heising: Our beautiful QWEEN
According to his bio on Letterboxd, Jamie Grefe is a director, producer, screenwriter and consultant who summons narratives of twisted suspense, horror and poetic sensuality. Actively collaborating across genres, Grefe is adept at crafting confrontational works that mesmerize and entrance audiences worldwide.
His site says, “XENOSLIT CONSOLIDATED CINEMA and VERTICAL MICRO-DRAMA SYSTEMS: A propulsive script provides the hook, but the camera stays close enough for performances to become exposed, volatile, and difficult to fake. Time pressure creates urgency. Imperfect spaces become visual texture. Shadows, reflections, repeated gestures, and abrupt cuts make the drama feel lived rather than manufactured. For vertical micro-drama, the method delivers what the format needs: immediate emotional stakes, memorable images, actor-driven intensity, efficient production, and moments designed to stop the scroll. It is poor cinema without looking cheap. Market-aware cinema without becoming anonymous. A repeatable method for capturing something unrepeatable.”
There are more than 40 of his movies on Tubi.
I feel like I am late and have so much to catch up on.
This film begins with Dawna Lee Heising as Miss Yamamoto saying, “Ah, Tokyo. What a decadent city. This will be the perfect spot for my lovely angels. I’ll make sure they feel the power of the orb.”
This is followed by 67 minutes of Vanessa (Cynda McElvana) and Regina (Martina Monti) wandering around a neon‑drenched, rain‑slicked future Tokyo on the brink of cybernetic collapse. Or a noodle shop set and a hotel room.
Anyway, this disjointed descent revolves around John (director and writer Grefe), who is put through a wringer of psychological and physical torment by these women. They don’t just attack him once; they cycle through a series of roles that blur the lines of his reality. One minute they are his girlfriend, the next they are high-priced call girls, and then they shift into his boss or subordinate.
From what I’ve read, this film is part of Grefe’s “static” series, continuing his signature blend of stylized visuals, dreamlike pacing and psychological intrigue. That means an atmospheric sci‑fi setting with cyberpunk and giallo‑influenced visuals; philosophical themes of love, reality and control; surreal pacing, with moments of surprise revelation, mystery and identity exploration as core drivers.
It reminds me of Jess Franco’s end-of-career SOV hotel and apartment films, like Montes de Venus, La cripta de las condenadas, Snakewoman and Jess Franco’s Passion and Perversion. Formless films that seem to have some great message behind them but that remain nearly impenetrable. I mean that as high praise.
You can watch this on Tubi.