John Waters' second film is grotesque, full of all kinds of Duo, from robbing Jie to plotting Sha, to one of the most memorable blasphemies in film history. The director took on almost all the technical tasks with a meagre budget in his hometown of Baltimore. The film is a joyous mockery of the zeitgeist of love and peace, showing a series of transformational Tai behaviors and a tour of a group of loners whose shocking hobbies are second only to their leader Dao: the super-unique, legendary Divine, who spills her blood on the street after discovering that her Qing has an outside Yu. "Crazy Life," starring Waters' favorite royal actors, including David Lokry, Mary Vivian Pierce, Susan Law, Edith Messi and Cookie Miller, is an artist's Zheng-free Yi masterpiece who has stubbornly tested the limits of good taste for decades.