Ana Galvañ’s Press to Continue has sweet cotton candy colors that belie a sinister premise in all these experimental shorts, all of which are unnamed and many of which are wordless. All these things apply: Art comics, futuristic, dystopian, technological, surreal, atmospheric, unemotional. The title points to digital/video gaming in which participants (us) are victimized in and through tech by people in power. We see featureless faces, anyone is everyone. Few backgrounds.
In one a tiger seems to come through a screen and actually injures/kills a woman--the other women escape; in another a new trapeze artist at a circus hooks up with Scandal, The Human Doll, a robot, but he’s warned away from her when he finds what happened to his predecessor. The third features a bizarre interview format where a woman feels threatened, calls her interviewer on it, but she gets a second interview, anyway, and is a little disturbed to not know why. A fourth focuses on a boy who is sent to a camp with a lot of surveillance.
Oh, I saw at a glance references to Philip K. Dick in a couple other reviews, and this seems right: The speculative paranoia. Very thoughtful and coolly distant work.