克莱尔对自己、工作和家庭都充满信心,直到她的丈夫消失了,一系列令人费解的秘密粉碎了她的信心。克莱尔的丈夫神秘失踪三周后,警方结束了调查,她的儿子开始悲伤,唯一没有放弃的人是克莱尔。随着深入挖掘,克莱尔开始质疑自己是否真正了解,并开始质疑自己的身份。一个穷困的大学肄业生为了12万5千美元奖金,开始玩一个离奇古怪的1980年代生存题材电脑游戏。随后她被游戏诅咒,面临危险的选择和扭转现实的挑战,并经历了一系列恐怖事件。此时她终于意识到:自己不是为了钱而玩游戏,而是为了命。Deserves recognition as an interesting misunderstanding of the hallucination generation, 20 January 2007 Author TimothyFarrell from Worcester, MA Wild in the Streets comes from the same school of film making that spawned other attempts to connect to the counterculture such as Skidoo and Candy. The difference between this and the aforementioned films is that Wild in the Streets is reasonably clever and well-made. It isn't sympathetic to the counterculture and will likely offend those with fond memories of the time. Surprisingly, it was a big hit when released and appealed to the youth whom it ridiculed so much. Unlike The Trip and Psych-Out (two other AIP films), its not an accurate representation of the movement at all. However it does work as social satire. The direction by Barry Shear is good and makes innovative use of split screen photography. Plus, he keeps everything moving at a quick pace. In its funny moments, the film works well. In its attempts at drama, its helplessly dated and just as funny as the humorous moments. Christopher Jones underplays his role and Shelly Winters overacts. Hal Holbrook offers the best performance and Diane Varsi achieves the right note of grooviness. The script by Robert Thom has its moments, especially the ending (easily the most ingenious part of the film). Wild in the Streets isn't perfect, but deserves recognition as an interesting misunderstanding of the hallucination generation. Those into this kind of kitsch will enjoy it the most. I'd rather watch The Trip or Psych-Out however. (610) -from imdb