The Second Coming of Suzanne

Richard Dreyfuss appears as a member of the crew who becomes concerned at the increasingly weird antics of the rest of the ensemble, which culminate in the crucifixion of Suzanne on a local hill.

[5] Locations include Sam's Anchor Café, Angel Island and the Lyford House in Tiburon, the Bay Bridge toll plaza, Golden Gate Park and downtown Berkeley.

[6] Joe Pollack of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch gave the movie two out of five stars, calling it "visually fascinating, but also strangely disconnected and extremely self-indulgent.

"[7] Jacoba Atlas, writing for the Los Angeles Free Press, called it "banal in the extreme," and the San Francisco Examiner's Michele Lomax echoed that the movie is "without soul.

"[8] Syndicated critic Rex Reed, however, hailed it as "an arresting, poetic puzzle of a film that stimulates and hypnotizes by utilizing every aspect of the cinematic medium...courageous, free-swinging filmmaking, full of surprises and freshness...it's exciting.