

A repressed husband attempts to murder his bread-winning wife for her life insurance policy in this madcap, 1950s-inspired satire.
Production
Lush 1950s aesthetic that weaponizes nostalgia against itself.
Acting
Tyler Poelle's repressed desperation hits deliciously unhinged notes.
Writing
Satire sharp enough to cut through the pastel veneer.
Director
Tiffany Kim Stevens
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The film inverts Leave It to Beaver domesticity, using midcentury aesthetics to critique how economic dependence breeds resentment.
Tyler Poelle trained in 1950s household appliance operation to make George's ineptitude authentic.