The Babysitter
It's not a farce in my view (like a PJ Wodehouse type thing, an amusing story as you put it) and it's not just a vehicle for the author's erotic fantasies either. No author of this level of skill (as is apparent by how well-written it is) is going to go to all that trouble simply to reveal himself as some kind of a perv. Besides, the relationships and interplay between the cuts show that there's a lot of effort put in to interweave into and mirror the theme of sexuality in just about everything, subtly and not so subtly. There's also a lot of purposeful misdirection here. I'd say it's more a complex deconstruction of modern suburban life than a fantasy vehicle. And though I agreed with you about "Cat Person", I now think you are a complete philistine. How things change!
:razz:
The characters seem to be vehicles for the author's masturbatory fantasies, and say really nothing about actual, real people. — Bitter Crank
In order to say something about real people, you don't need characters who act like real people though. You may want characters who
seem like real people. But you don't even need that. Watch any David Lynch movie. Are any of the characters anything like real people? Real individuals don't reflect reality on a grand scale very well because they're diluted and messy representations when what you want is distilled
characters who play their particular part in the engine of the work. In a story like this, the characters are deliberately 2D, sexually frustrated husband, sexy young babysitter, amoral teenage boys, naughty kids etc. They slot into a particular function and play it consistently. The complexity comes then from the form. Lynch does this too, his characters are often odd and extreme but fairly predictable "types", so in a way are simplistic. But his movies tend to play with form in interesting ways in terms of how they are constructed.
More to say later, but my initial reaction is that I like it and think there's a lot to it.