| Aktor | Peran | | :--- | :--- | | Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje | Detective Jack Fisher | | Heather Graham | Savannah (istri Jack) | | Christopher McDonald | Chief Chuck | | Reyna de Courcy | Julie | | Sean Patrick Thomas | Detective Mike Simmons |
Drawing on Julia Kristeva’s concept of "abjection"—the human revulsion towards bodily wastes that threaten the clean, proper self— Wetlands systematically violates hygiene taboos. Helen’s famous "snot scene" (rubbing a used tissue on her teeth) and her mixing of bodily fluids into food are not random acts of disgust. They represent a deliberate refusal of the sanitized female body demanded by Western consumer culture. By embracing the abject, Helen removes the shame associated with natural biological functions. nonton film wetlands upd
Director David Wnendt utilizes a vibrant, almost "pop-art" aesthetic that contrasts sharply with the film's "dirty" subject matter. Cinematography | Aktor | Peran | | :--- |
Unlike traditional coming-of-age stories that focus on social acceptance or academic success, focuses on radical self-acceptance By embracing the abject, Helen removes the shame