Larry Kent's High (1967)
A young, amoral couple living amorously in Montreal and Toronto, and unable to make ends meet, take to seducing men and robbing them. Kent's most experimental film to date, leaping between black and white and colour stock and featuring a hallucinogenic credit sequence, it was banned by censors on its premier screening at the Montreal Film Festival, but subsequently supported by Festival jury members Jean Renoir and Fritz Lang.
Larry Kent
One of the original English-Canadian auteurs, Larry Kent produced, wrote and directed a number of enigmatic, personal and powerful dramas during the sixties and early seventies. He currently lives and works in Vancouver. His films were showcased in a retrospective at Cinema Quebecoise, Ontario Cinematheque and Pacific Cinematheque in 2002-03, "Exile on Main Street (and Hastings): The Films of Larry Kent."

