Come Back For More

Best Experimental Film
On a remote island, seven women from different corners of the world gather around an extravagant dining table. Each arrives carrying something symbolic, a candle, a mirror, fragments of memory, desire, and loss. As they sit together, what begins as a shared ritual spirals into a surreal unfolding of chaos.
Their conversations flow across multiple languages, sometimes whispered, sometimes shouted, sometimes collapsing into silence. What emerges is not a single linear narrative, but a fractured tapestry of voices, confessions of heartbreak, stories of betrayal, and the quiet ache of being unseen. Each woman carries her own wounds, yet together they reveal the universality of longing, resilience, and the human capacity for survival.
Come Back for More is an experimental meditation on visibility and erasure, exploring what it means to be silenced in a world that is too busy, too loud, and too often fails to truly listen.
By embracing confusion and dissonance, the film challenges its audience to slow down and pay attention, to discover meaning not in order, but in fragments, echoes, and gestures. Ultimately, it is a story about connection across barriers of culture and language, and a reminder that in the midst of chaos, unheard voices are still calling out to be seen.

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