

Dicks on walls, bodies dropping, nobody cares. Belgian cops vs. existential dread.
Benjamin and Little Pierre, cousins and local policemen, patrol Vitrival while listening to Radio Chevauchoir. They have a lot to do: dick graffitis are popping up on the village walls. Of course, no one has seen or heard anything. At the same time, one villager commits suicide, then two, then three. Season after season, dick graffitis and suicides proliferate. What can Benjamin and Pierre do about it? Days and celebrations will keep flowing, no matter what.
Acting
The cousins' chemistry is painfully authentic, all shrugs and silences.
Direction
Directors capture Wallonia's crushing beauty like a bruise.
Writing
Dick graffiti as narrative engine? Deranged genius.
Director
Noëlle Bastin
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The directors are siblings who grew up in Wallonia; several cast members share their surname, suggesting this is basically family therapy on film.
Radio Chevauchoir references a real Belgian folklore tradition, grounding the absurdity in hyper-specific regional identity that most viewers will miss entirely.
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