🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
Life Is Cheap... But Toilet Paper Is Expensive (bluray) Limited Edition
HomeStore

Life Is Cheap... But Toilet Paper Is Expensive (bluray) Limited Edition

Life Is Cheap... But Toilet Paper Is Expensive (bluray) Limited Edition

Exploding a seemingly simple premise – a nameless ā€œcowboyā€ courier (Spencer Nakasako) arrives in pre-Handover Hong Kong to deliver a mysterious briefcase to a mercurial Mob boss whilst becoming entangled with his femme fatale mistress (Cora Miao) – independent filmmaking legend Wayne Wang’sĀ Life is Cheap… But Toilet Paper is ExpensiveĀ barrels through inspired genre deconstruction, guerrilla docu-fiction and fierce political jeremiad, all with a keen sense of humour and one of the richest visual palettes of the 1990s.

$23.93
Life Is Cheap... But Toilet Paper Is Expensive (bluray) Limited Edition—
$23.93

More Images

Life Is Cheap... But Toilet Paper Is Expensive (bluray) Limited Edition - Image 2

Life Is Cheap... But Toilet Paper Is Expensive (bluray) Limited Edition

Exploding a seemingly simple premise – a nameless ā€œcowboyā€ courier (Spencer Nakasako) arrives in pre-Handover Hong Kong to deliver a mysterious briefcase to a mercurial Mob boss whilst becoming entangled with his femme fatale mistress (Cora Miao) – independent filmmaking legend Wayne Wang’sĀ Life is Cheap… But Toilet Paper is ExpensiveĀ barrels through inspired genre deconstruction, guerrilla docu-fiction and fierce political jeremiad, all with a keen sense of humour and one of the richest visual palettes of the 1990s.

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Exploding a seemingly simple premise – a nameless ā€œcowboyā€ courier (Spencer Nakasako) arrives in pre-Handover Hong Kong to deliver a mysterious briefcase to a mercurial Mob boss whilst becoming entangled with his femme fatale mistress (Cora Miao) – independent filmmaking legend Wayne Wang’sĀ Life is Cheap… But Toilet Paper is ExpensiveĀ barrels through inspired genre deconstruction, guerrilla docu-fiction and fierce political jeremiad, all with a keen sense of humour and one of the richest visual palettes of the 1990s.