Hidden Camera Captures Ex-lover on Rampage of Revenge
"Busted" is real life video that documents one woman's Relentless attempts to avenge her ex-lover's decision to end their romance. Ignoring a restraining order, she's caught by a hidden camera as we watch her trash his living space. Sometimes sad, sometimes funny, this is one romance with only one place to go -- the court of law.
(PRWEB) May 17, 2004 -- "Busted!" is a 37-minute reality video that is
actually real. No auditions, no contrived scenes, no wannabe actors, looking for
their 15 minutes of fame and a TV deal. Instead, "Busted!" is a riveting series
of scenes from a hidden video camera. It chronicles the decline and fall of a
romance between two very real people, ending in court, while portraying one
woman's startling obstinacy and self-obsession as she unknowingly
reveals
herself again and again and again.
When his romance with his live-in
girlfriend fell apart, the video's narrator knew it would be some time before
they could work out new accommodations. As a temporary arrangement, he moved
into the second bedroom, making that room his home.
But he knew the
character of his girlfriend only too well by this time, and knew that her prying
nature and her suspicions of him would rapidly overcome her, and so he set a
kind of trap for her. Partly for his own protection as well, he installed a
video camera in his bedroom.
Sure enough, he had read his former lover
right. When he returned to his room the first time and played back the
videotape, he saw her creeping into the room and going through his
things.
As the atmosphere between them deteriorated further, he locked
the room. Now each time he returned, he saw her breaking the door off its
hinges, breaking in smashing things, throwing his clothes and possessions on the
floor. Naturally, he turned to the law for protection and got a restraining
order against her.
Expertly edited and with the courtroom scene finely
re-created on the soundtrack by skilled actors, this is a unique, sad and often
hilarious journey through a couple's rocky ride to final
separation.
Education Through Communication has produced a number of
documentaries, dealing with social issues. “Some Won’t Go”, which questioned the
Vietnam War by the young men facing it.
“The Inner Revolution”, documents a
thirty-five year old college professor’s experience in a therapeutic exercise,
Primal Therapy. Both were invited to over 60 film festivals nationally and
Internationally. Including Cannes, Edinburgh, Berlin, Moscow, New York and
Venice.
# # #
Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2004/5/prweb126579.htm