Invasion
Invasion
Inspired by the J. G. Ballard novel High-Rise, this performance features Royal representing an establishment in decline, maintaining elegant deeds that attract lower-class groups. He feigns ignorance of the system's deterioration, but his unease is apparent.
Wilder hesitates to attract the faithful and climb to the higher classes. He succeeds in killing Royal, only to be stabbed to death immediately afterwards, the repercussions of his earlier arrogance and lewdness.
The deaths of the two pathetic men are not the end. They are merely a small component of the continuous cycle of establishment and anti-establishment within human society.
Inspired by the J. G. Ballard novel High-Rise, this performance features Royal representing an establishment in decline, maintaining elegant deeds that attract lower-class groups. He feigns ignorance of the system's deterioration, but his unease is apparent.
Wilder hesitates to attract the faithful and climb to the higher classes. He succeeds in killing Royal, only to be stabbed to death immediately afterwards, the repercussions of his earlier arrogance and lewdness.
The deaths of the two pathetic men are not the end. They are merely a small component of the continuous cycle of establishment and anti-establishment within human society.