Two Bad Daughters

1988, 12:21 min, b&w and color, sound

"Two Bad Daughters, by Barbara Hammer and Paula Levine, is a whirlwind tour of paternal institutions: fatherhood, Lacanian psychoanalysis and bondage. The tape turns on the dominators, using a heavy complement of graphics and manipulated images to collapse control. The stratified surface of Two Bad Daughters is playful, an energetic barrage of text, acrimony and artifice. It is play that proves most subversive. The 'Bad Daughters' reject obedience to the Father in favor of the impish anarchy of self-possession." — Steve Seid, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive