In Free Fall, Gyorgy Palfi's imagination expands beyond boundaries, like a young man running through the wall. An old lady jumps off an apartment building in Budapest. Instead of dying a horrible death, she picks up th...展开e pieces of her broken glasses and walks up the stairs. As she climbs each floor, kaleidoscopic stories taking place in the building's seven rooms are shown on the screen. The lady played by Molnar Piroska, who worked with Palfi in Taxidermia, stands at the center of the tapestry-like story. These events seem to have occurred somewhere or to occur in the future. The seven rooms reenacting different genres, such as SF, horror, romance, and sitcom, equal to the storage of imagination. A woman walking around naked at a decent party, a couple making love while wrapped in plastic, or a woman undergoing an operation to send her baby back to womb; none of these is close to normality. Where is the destination of these bizarre stories, then? Questioning the concept of normality, Free Fall is a grotesque film full of elements which Palfi's fans would look forward to. (Jang Byungwon)