
This entry in the series crisscrosses America to find various curiosities. Among them are a church in Nebraska made of bales of hay; a duck with four legs that lives with its owner in Flint, Michigan; a 128-year-old woman who lives in Holly Springs, Mississippi, with her 100-year-old daughter; and, in a cemetery in Mayfield, Kentucky, a family plot wherein the deceased members are memorialized with life-sized statues, including the patriarch's horse and other family pets.
United States

Is this worth your time? Honestly, only if you have ten minutes to kill and a soft spot for the strange. It's not a narrative film, so don't go looking for character arcs or The Fall Guy level excitement. It's a curiosity cabinet on screen. If you prefer your documentaries to be about actual history or high-stakes dram...

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Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Unknown Director

Unknown Director
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"Is this worth your time? Honestly, only if you have ten minutes to kill and a soft spot for the strange. It's not a narrative film, so don't go looking for character arcs or The Fall Guy level excitement. It's a curiosity cabinet on screen. If you prefer your documentaries to be about actual history or high-stakes drama, you'll probably hate this. It’s just a list of things that someone thought were neat in the 1930s. The Hay Church and the Duck There’s something hypnotic about the segment with..."

