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Insignificance (Region B)
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Insignificance (Region B)

Insignificance (Region B)

An artistic tour de force from iconoclastic auteur Nicolas Roeg,Ā InsignificanceĀ remains one of Roeg's most compelling and idiosyncratic films. A distinctive adaptation of Terry Johnson's acclaimed play, it features bravura performances from Theresa Russell, Michael Emil, Gary Busey and Tony Curtis and is featured here as a High Definition remaster from original film elements in its original theatrical aspect ratio.

On a hot night in 1954, a professor, an actress, a senator and a ballplayer converge in a New York hotel, their interactions moving fluidly through time in a post-war fable that ends in destruction. Or does it?
$4.90

Original: $13.99

-65%
Insignificance (Region B)—

$13.99

$4.90

Insignificance (Region B)

An artistic tour de force from iconoclastic auteur Nicolas Roeg,Ā InsignificanceĀ remains one of Roeg's most compelling and idiosyncratic films. A distinctive adaptation of Terry Johnson's acclaimed play, it features bravura performances from Theresa Russell, Michael Emil, Gary Busey and Tony Curtis and is featured here as a High Definition remaster from original film elements in its original theatrical aspect ratio.

On a hot night in 1954, a professor, an actress, a senator and a ballplayer converge in a New York hotel, their interactions moving fluidly through time in a post-war fable that ends in destruction. Or does it?

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An artistic tour de force from iconoclastic auteur Nicolas Roeg,Ā InsignificanceĀ remains one of Roeg's most compelling and idiosyncratic films. A distinctive adaptation of Terry Johnson's acclaimed play, it features bravura performances from Theresa Russell, Michael Emil, Gary Busey and Tony Curtis and is featured here as a High Definition remaster from original film elements in its original theatrical aspect ratio.

On a hot night in 1954, a professor, an actress, a senator and a ballplayer converge in a New York hotel, their interactions moving fluidly through time in a post-war fable that ends in destruction. Or does it?