It's an interesting topic, but the movie is so focused on itself *as* a movie that the topic is essentially lost. While the director apparently thinks that the cuts and blackouts and visual stutter reference vision loss, they register only as "tricks," more appropriate to a music video, or possibly a film school project. The children's science show Newton's Apple did a better job of describing what an ocularist does, and at least as good a job of describing the role of prosthetic eyes socially. There's an interesting topic for a movie hidden inside this movie—society's need for disabled people to hide their disability, for example—but if that occurred to the filmmaker, it's obscured by the visual style.