“The C*nt Flicker”: Marfa Cvntry Club’s Yee-Haw Cinema Event Takes on West Texas

Marfa Cvntry Club proudly (and questionably) presents its debut feature film, “The C*nt Flicker”—a desert melodrama with big skies, bigger personalities, and a plot that drifts lovingly in the direction of Giant without ever asking permission.

Directed by Buck Fasement, written by Ben Dover, and produced by Phil McCracken, the film stars Anita Drink as a mysterious outsider who arrives in West Texas with a reputation, a suitcase, and absolutely no interest in explaining herself.

Plot: Big Land, Bigger Attitude

Set against the endless backdrop of West Texas, “The C*nt Flicker” follows a woman known only by her nickname—a title earned, whispered about, and never fully clarified. She arrives in a small desert town (you know which one) and immediately disrupts the fragile ecosystem of ranchers, artists, and people who “just came for a weekend and stayed for six years.”

Cast & Characters

  • Anita Drink as The Cnt Flicker*: charismatic, unreadable, and always one step ahead of everyone else’s narrative

  • A rotating ensemble of desert locals, each more suspicious and intriguing than the last

Her presence raises immediate questions:

  • Who is she?

  • Why is she here?

  • How is she pulling off that outfit in 102-degree heat?

The film does not answer all of these.

Soundtrack: Two-Stepping Through Chaos

The original score blends honky-tonk energy with unexpected nostalgia, featuring music by The Baha Men alongside regional legend Two Step Tucker.

Yes, it works.
No, no one can fully explain why.

Filming Location: The Myth of Marfa
Shot on location in and around Marfa, the film captures the strange duality of the desert:

  • vast, empty landscapes

  • hyper-specific social dynamics

  • lighting that makes everything feel like a memory you haven’t had yet

The influence of Donald Judd is present, whether intentionally or because you physically cannot escape it while filming in Marfa.

Themes (For SEO and Emotional Depth)

“The C*nt Flicker” explores:

  • Outsider identity in small-town Texas

  • Power dynamics in desert communities

  • Feminine mystique and reputation

  • The mythology of West Texas culture

  • What it means to arrive somewhere and immediately change it

It’s a film about land, yes—but also about presence. About the way one person can shift an entire atmosphere just by existing slightly louder than expected.

A Yee-Haw Release

Marketed as a “Yee Haw Release,” the film leans fully into its Western drama roots while refusing to behave like a traditional Western. There are no clean heroes. No simple arcs. Just heat, tension, and a growing sense that something is always about to happen.

Why This Film Matters (Allegedly)

“The C*nt Flicker” positions Marfa Cvntry Club as:

  • a cultural instigator

  • a storytelling platform

  • a group willing to commit fully to the bit

Search terms this film accidentally dominates:

  • Marfa Texas film

  • West Texas movies

  • indie country western drama

  • Marfa art scene film

  • things inspired by Giant

Final Take

“The C*nt Flicker” is less a film and more an event—something you experience, discuss, and then reference vaguely for the rest of your life.

Did it answer your questions? No.
Did it give you new ones? Absolutely.
Will you think about it the next time you’re in West Texas, holding a drink and watching the light change? Without a doubt.

Marfa Cvntry Club presents: cinema, confusion, and a perfectly timed entrance.

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