REVIEW OF BREAKFAST ON PLUTO DVD

I generally like Neil Jordan's irreverent yet often affectionate take on the illogical assumptions of the world and of the institutions in it that grind away our precious individuality. But if it get's any more precious than this I might have to pull out my old copies of The Company of Wolves, The Butcher Boy and Interview with a Vampire to stifle my gag reflex and remind me how spot on this director can be about human nature and the wonder of yearning for the innefable.
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